Infant crying and maternal responsiveness.

BELL, SILVIA M., and AINSWORTH, MARY D. SALTER. Infant Crying and Maternal Responsiveness. CHILD DEVELOPMENT, 1972, 43, 1171-1190. This naturalistic, longitudinal study of 26 infant-mother pairs shows that consistency and promptness of maternal response is associated with decline in frequency and duration of infant crying. By the end of the first year individual differences in crying reflect the history of maternal responsiveness rather than constitutional differences in infant irritability. Close physical contact is the most frequent maternal intervention and the most effective in terminating crying. Nevertheless, maternal effectiveness in terminating crying was found to be less powerful than promptness of response in reducing crying in subsequent months. Evidence suggests that whereas crying is expressive at first, it can later be a mode of communication directed specifically toward the mother. The development of noncrying modes of communication, as well as a decline in crying, is associated with maternal responsiveness to infant signals. The findings are discussed in an evolutionary context, and with reference to the popular belief that to respond to his cries "spoils" a baby.

[1]  J. M. Dobbs Determinants of infant behavior , 1964 .

[2]  N. Bayley A Study of the Crying of Infants During Mental and Physical Tests , 1932 .

[3]  G. Abbott Children's Bureau , 1929 .

[4]  J. L. Gewirtz Attachment and Dependency , 1972 .

[5]  B. Etzel,et al.  Experimental modification of caretaker-maintained high-rate operant crying in a 6- and a 20-week-old infant (Infans tyrannotearus): extinction of crying with reinforcement of eye contact and smiling. , 1967, Journal of experimental child psychology.

[6]  R. Hogan,et al.  Infant obedience and maternal behavior: the origins of socialization reconsidered. , 1971, Child development.

[7]  J. Bowlby Attachment and loss: retrospect and prospect. , 1969, The American journal of orthopsychiatry.

[8]  S. Provence,et al.  Infants in Institutions: A Comparison of Their Development with Family Reared Infants During the First Year of Life , 1967 .

[9]  H. Schaffer,et al.  Psychologic effects of hospitalization in infancy. , 1959, Pediatrics.

[10]  J. Piaget,et al.  The Origins of Intelligence in Children , 1971 .

[11]  M. Ainsworth,et al.  Attachment, exploration, and separation: illustrated by the behavior of one-year-olds in a strange situation. , 1970, Child development.

[12]  Hayden L. Mees,et al.  Application of operant conditioning procedures to the behaviour problems of an autistic child , 1963 .

[13]  J. Bowlby,et al.  The nature of the child's tie to his mother. , 1958, The International journal of psycho-analysis.

[14]  M. Hoffman,et al.  Review of Child Development Research , 1966 .

[15]  F. R. Harris,et al.  Effects of social reinforcement on operant crying , 1964 .

[16]  M. Ainsworth,et al.  Individual Differences in the Development of Some Attachment Behaviors. , 1971 .

[17]  H. Moss Sex, Age, and State as Determinants of Mother-Infant Interaction* , 1967 .

[18]  Main Tf Psychological effects of hospitalization. , 1966 .

[19]  C. Williams,et al.  The elimination of tantrum behavior by extinction procedures. , 1959, Journal of abnormal and social psychology.

[20]  Goslin,et al.  Handbook of socialization theory and research , 1969 .

[21]  J. A. Ambrose,et al.  Stimulation in Early Infancy , 1970 .

[22]  M. Ainsworth Infancy In Uganda, Infant Care and the Growth of Love , 1967 .