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1.
Child Dev ; 89(3): 837-850, 2018 05.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28374899

Do caregivers in non-Western communities adapt their behaviors to the needs of infants? This question reflects one of the most long-standing debates on the universality versus culture-specificity of caregiver-infant interactions in general and sensitive responsiveness to infants in particular. In this article, an integration of both points of view is presented, based on the theoretical origins of the sensitive responsiveness construct combined with the ethnographic literature on caregivers and infants in different parts of the world. This integration advocates universality without uniformity, and calls for multidisciplinary collaborations to investigate the complexities and nuances of caregiver-infant interactions in different cultures. Salient issues are illustrated with observations of infants (ages 7-31 months) in Mali, the Republic of Congo, and the Philippines.


Child Rearing/ethnology , Family Relations/ethnology , Adult , Child, Preschool , Congo/ethnology , Female , Humans , Infant , Male , Mali/ethnology , Philippines/ethnology
2.
Attach Hum Dev ; 18(2): 101-14, 2016.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26768417

A network of multiple caregivers contributing to the care of an infant is the norm in many non-Western cultural contexts. Current observational measures of caregiver sensitive responsiveness to infant signals focus on single caregivers, failing to capture the total experience of the infant when it comes to the sensitive responsiveness received from multiple sources. The current paper aims to introduce the construct of received sensitivity that captures the sensitivity that an infant experiences from multiple sources in cultural contexts where simultaneous multiple caregiving is common. The paper further presents an adaptation of Ainsworth's Sensitivity versus Insensitivity observation scale to allow for the assessment of sensitivity as received by the infant regardless of who is providing the sensitive responses to its signals. The potential usefulness of the Received Sensitivity scale is illustrated by two case studies of infants from an Agta forager community in the Philippines where infants are routinely taken care of by multiple caregivers. The case studies show that the infants' total experience of being responded to sensitively cannot be simply derived from the sum of individual caregiver sensitivity scores, demonstrating the potential added value of the new Received Sensitivity observation measure.


Caregivers/psychology , Ethnopsychology , Infant Behavior/psychology , Infant Care/methods , Object Attachment , Cross-Cultural Comparison , Ethnology , Humans , Infant , Infant Behavior/ethnology , Infant Care/psychology , Philippines , Photography
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