Parental Sensitivity to Infant Distress: What do Discrete Negative Emotions Have to Do with It?

Type
Summary

Parental sensitivity, a crucial element of attachment theory, refers to the ability to correctly interpret and respond appropriately to infants’ signals. The question of whether infants’ emotional expressions communicate discrete negative emotions has been widely debated in the literature on infant emotional development, but it has rarely been discussed in the parental sensitivity literature. This article explores how insights from the parental sensitivity literature and from evolutionary and dynamical systems perspectives on infant emotion expressions can be brought together to enhance our understanding of parental responsiveness to infant distress. The current research concludes that sensitivity does not rely on reading discrete negative emotions in infant signals, but rather on an integration of complex, graded distress expressions with contextual factors and iterative interaction processes.

Citation
Mesman, J., Oster, H., & Camras, L. (2012). Parental sensitivity to infant distress: what do discrete negative emotions have to do with it?. Attachment & human development, 14(4), 337-348. doi:10.1080/14616734.2012.691649