skip to main content
US FlagAn official website of the United States government
dot gov icon
Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.
https lock icon
Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( lock ) or https:// means you've safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.


Title: Within arms reach: Physical proximity shapes mother-infant language exchanges in real-time
During everyday interactions, mothers and infants achieve behavioral synchrony at multiple levels. The ebb-and-flow of mother-infant physical proximity may be a central type of synchrony that establishes a common ground for infant-mother interaction. However, the role of proximity in language exchanges is relatively unstudied, perhaps because structured tasks—the common setup for observing infant-caregiver interactions—establish proximity by design. We videorecorded 100 mothers (U.S. Hispanic N =50, U.S. Non-Hispanic N =50) and their 13- to 23-month-old infants during natural activity at home (1-to-2 h per dyad), transcribed mother and infant speech, and coded proximity continuously (i.e., infants and mother within arms reach). In both samples, dyads entered proximity in a bursty temporal pattern, with bouts of proximity interspersed with bouts of physical distance. As hypothesized, Non-Hispanic and Hispanic mothers produced more words and a greater variety of words when within arms reach than out of arms reach. Similarly, infants produced more utterances that contained words when close to mother than when not. However, infants babbled equally often regardless of proximity, generating abundant opportunities to play with sounds. Physical proximity expands opportunities for language exchanges and infants’ communicative word use, although babies accumulate massive practice babbling even when caregivers are not proximal.  more » « less
Award ID(s):
2314963 2314964
PAR ID:
10526701
Author(s) / Creator(s):
; ;
Editor(s):
Van_Den_Heuvel, M; Wass, S V
Publisher / Repository:
Elsevier
Date Published:
Journal Name:
Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience
Edition / Version:
1
Volume:
64
Issue:
C
ISSN:
1878-9293
Page Range / eLocation ID:
101298
Subject(s) / Keyword(s):
Language input infant vocalizations synchrony proximity burstiness temporal structure infant-caregiver interactions
Format(s):
Medium: X Size: 2.3MB Other: pdf
Size(s):
2.3MB
Sponsoring Org:
National Science Foundation
More Like this
  1. Objective. Maternal stress is a psychological response to the demands of motherhood. A high level of maternal stress is a risk factor for maternal mental health problems, including depression and anxiety, as well as adverse infant socioemotional and cognitive outcomes. Yet, levels of maternal stress (i.e., levels of stress related to parenting) among low-risk samples are rarely studied longitudinally, particularly in the first year after birth. Design. We measured maternal stress in an ethnically diverse sample of low-risk, healthy U.S. mothers of healthy infants (N = 143) living in South Florida across six time points between 2 weeks and 14 months postpartum using the Parenting Stress Index-Short Form, capturing stress related to the mother, mother-infant interactions, and the infant. Results. Maternal distress increased as infants aged for mothers with more than one child, but not for first-time mothers whose distress levels remained low and stable across this period. Stress related to mother-infant dysfunctional interactions lessened over the first 8 months. Mothers’ stress about their infants’ difficulties decreased from 2 weeks to 6 months, and subsequently increased from 6 to 14 months. Conclusions. Our findings suggest that maternal stress is dynamic across the first year after birth. The current study adds to our understanding of typical developmental patterns in early motherhood and identifies potential domains and time points as targets for future interventions. 
    more » « less
  2. Abstract Children's daily contexts shape their experiences. In this study, we assessed whether variations in infant placement (e.g., held, bouncy seat) are associated with infants' exposure to adult speech. Using repeated survey sampling of mothers and continuous audio recordings, we tested whether the use of independence‐supporting placements was associated with adult speech exposure in a Southeastern U.S. sample of 60 4‐ to 6‐month‐old infants (38% male, predominately White, not Hispanic/Latinx, from higher socioeconomic status households). Within‐subject analyses indicated that independence‐supporting placements were associated with exposure to fewer adult words in the moment. Between‐subjects analyses indicated that infants more frequently reported to be in independence‐supporting placements that also provided posture support (i.e., an exersaucer) were exposed to relatively fewer adult words and less consistent adult speech across the day. These findings indicate that infants' opportunities for exposure to adult speech ‘in the wild’ may vary based on immediate physical context. 
    more » « less
  3. Observing how infants and mothers coordinate their behaviors can highlight meaningful patterns in early communication and infant development. While dyads often differ in the modalities they use to communicate, especially in the first year of life, it remains unclear how to capture coordination across multiple types of behaviors using existing computational models of interpersonal synchrony. This paper explores Dynamic Mode Decomposition with control (DMDc) as a method of integrating multiple signals from each communicating partner into a model of multimodal behavioral coordination. We used an existing video dataset to track the head pose, arm pose, and vocal fundamental frequency of infants and mothers during the Face-to-Face Still-Face (FFSF) procedure, a validated 3-stage interaction paradigm. For each recorded interaction, we fit both unimodal and multimodal DMDc models to the extracted pose data. The resulting dynamic characteristics of the models were analyzed to evaluate trends in individual behaviors and dyadic processes across infant age and stages of the interactions. Results demonstrate that observed trends in interaction dynamics across stages of the FFSF protocol were stronger and more significant when models incorporated both head and arm pose data, rather than a single behavior modality. Model output showed significant trends across age, identifying changes in infant movement and in the relationship between infant and mother behaviors. Models that included mothers’ audio data demonstrated similar results to those evaluated with pose data, confirming that DMDc can leverage different sets of behavioral signals from each interacting partner. Taken together, our results demonstrate the potential of DMDc toward integrating multiple behavioral signals into the measurement of multimodal interpersonal coordination. 
    more » « less
  4. This study examined the immediate effects of mask-wearing on infant selective visual attention to audiovisual speech in familiar and unfamiliar languages. Infants distribute their selective attention to regions of a speaker's face differentially based on their age and language experience. However, the potential impact wearing a face mask may have on infants' selective attention to audiovisual speech has not been systematically studied. We utilized eye tracking to examine the proportion of infant looking time to the eyes and mouth of a masked or unmasked actress speaking in a familiar or unfamiliar language. Six-month-old and 12-month-old infants (n= 42, 55% female, 91% White Non-Hispanic/Latino) were shown videos of an actress speaking in a familiar language (English) with and without a mask on, as well as videos of the same actress speaking in an unfamiliar language (German) with and without a mask. Overall, infants spent more time looking at the unmasked presentations compared to the masked presentations. Regardless of language familiarity or age, infants spent more time looking at the mouth area of an unmasked speaker and they spent more time looking at the eyes of a masked speaker. These findings indicate mask-wearing has immediate effects on the distribution of infant selective attention to different areas of the face of a speaker during audiovisual speech. 
    more » « less
  5. When female chimpanzees, orangutans, and callitrichids share challenging‐to‐process resources with their offspring, they improve offspring access to foods and calories which would otherwise be unavailable. Adult chimpanzees share foods rarely, but when they do, sharing valuable resources solidifies inter‐individual bonds (e.g., when building coalitions or eliciting copulations). While maternal‐offspring food sharing has been studied in wild orangutans, the context in which adult orangutans share food and feed in proximity is poorly known. We use 27 years of research on orangutans in West Kalimantan, Indonesia, to examine this behavior. Food sharing and tolerance were observed during 2,131 follows between 1994‐2019. Mother‐infant food sharing occurred in 78%, of these follows, female‐female sharing in 22%, male‐female sharing in 32%, and male‐male in just 1%. Adult females shared foods at different rates with adult males than with offspring (Chi‐square = 49.27,p< .01,N= 589 events). Eighty‐one percent of mother‐offspring food sharing/tolerance was fruit, compared to only 71% of male‐female food sharing/tolerance. Durio, Lithocarpus, and Willughbeia (hard‐to‐process fruits) were most frequently shared by mothers. Twenty‐three percent of male‐female food sharing/tolerance occurred while eating termites; only 3% of mother‐infant sharing did. Only two of 350 mouth‐to‐mouth or hand‐to‐mouth transfers involved adult males and females. Mothers increase their offspring’s access to challenging resources, while food sharing/tolerance among adult males and females is not limited to valuable resources, but may indicate strong social tolerance or affiliation in generally solitary adults 
    more » « less