How Mothers Encourage and Discourage Infants' Motor Actions
Article first published online: 1 JUL 2008
DOI: 10.1080/15250000802188776
2008 International Society on Infant Studies
Additional Information
How to Cite
Karasik, L. B., Tamis-LeMonda, C. S., Adolph, K. E. and Dimitropoulou, K. A. (2008), How Mothers Encourage and Discourage Infants' Motor Actions. Infancy, 13: 366–392. doi: 10.1080/15250000802188776
Publication History
- Issue published online: 3 FEB 2010
- Article first published online: 1 JUL 2008
- Abstract
- References
- Cited By
The content of mothers' emotional, verbal, and gestural communication to their infants was examined under conditions of potential physical risk in a laboratory motor task. Mothers encouraged and discouraged their 12- and 18-month-old infants to crawl or walk down a sloping walkway. Mothers expressed positive affect on nearly every trial. They rarely expressed purely negative affect in their faces and voices, even when discouraging. Instead, they discouraged infants with a mixture of positive and negative expressions. In both encourage and discourage conditions, mothers coupled their emotional messages with rich verbal and gestural information to elicit infants' attention, regulate their location, guide their actions, and describe the situation and potential consequences of their actions. The content of mothers' communication was attuned to infants' age and locomotor experience.

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