Embodied Intersubjective Engagement in Mother-infant Tactile Communication: A cross-cultural study of Japanese and Scottish mother-infant behaviours during infant pick-up.

This study examines the early development of cultural differences in a simple, embodied and intersubjective engagement between mothers putting down, picking up, and carrying their infants between Japan and Scotland. Eleven Japanese and 10 Scottish mothers with their 6- and then 9-month-old infants p...

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Main Authors: Koichi eNegayama, Jonathan T. Delafield-Butt, Keiko eMomose, Konomi eIshijima, Noriko eKawahara, Erin eLux, Andrew eMurphy, Kaliarntas eKonstantinos
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2015-02-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2015.00066/full
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spelling doaj-b3614b1a1eff42a1a4af44a43061701c2020-11-24T23:27:32ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782015-02-01610.3389/fpsyg.2015.00066102974Embodied Intersubjective Engagement in Mother-infant Tactile Communication: A cross-cultural study of Japanese and Scottish mother-infant behaviours during infant pick-up.Koichi eNegayama0Jonathan T. Delafield-Butt1Keiko eMomose2Konomi eIshijima3Noriko eKawahara4Erin eLux5Andrew eMurphy6Kaliarntas eKonstantinos7Faculty of Human Sciences, Waseda UniversityStrathclyde UniversityFaculty of Human Sciences, Waseda UniversityFaculty of Human Sciences, Waseda UniversityKyoritsu Women's UniversityStrathclyde UniversityStrathclyde UniversityNapier UniversityThis study examines the early development of cultural differences in a simple, embodied and intersubjective engagement between mothers putting down, picking up, and carrying their infants between Japan and Scotland. Eleven Japanese and 10 Scottish mothers with their 6- and then 9-month-old infants participated. Video and motion analyses were employed to measure motor patterns of mothers’ approach to their infants, as well as their infants’ collaborative responses during put-down, pick-up and carry phases. Japanese and Scottish mothers approached their infants with different styles and their infants responded differently to the short duration of separation during the trial. A greeting-like behavior of the arms and hands was prevalent in Scottish mothers’ approach, but not in Japanese mothers’ approach. Japanese mothers typically kneeled before making the final reach to pick up their children, giving a closer, apparently gentler final approach of torso than Scottish mothers who bent at the waist in larger movements of the torso. Measures of the gap closure between the mother’s hand to infant’s head revealed variably longer duration and distance gap closures with greater velocity by Scottish mothers than by Japanese mothers. Further, the sequence of Japanese mothers’ coordinated body actions on approach, contact, pick-up, and hold was more coordinated at six months than at nine months. Scottish mothers were generally more variable on approach. Measures of infant participation and expressivity indicate more active participation in the negotiation during the separation and pick-up phases by Scottish infants. This paper demonstrates a culturally different onset of development of joint attention in pick-up. These differences reflect cultures of every-day interaction.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2015.00066/fulldevelopmentmotor controlanticipationcultural learningembodied intersubjectivityJapan and Scotland
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Koichi eNegayama
Jonathan T. Delafield-Butt
Keiko eMomose
Konomi eIshijima
Noriko eKawahara
Erin eLux
Andrew eMurphy
Kaliarntas eKonstantinos
spellingShingle Koichi eNegayama
Jonathan T. Delafield-Butt
Keiko eMomose
Konomi eIshijima
Noriko eKawahara
Erin eLux
Andrew eMurphy
Kaliarntas eKonstantinos
Embodied Intersubjective Engagement in Mother-infant Tactile Communication: A cross-cultural study of Japanese and Scottish mother-infant behaviours during infant pick-up.
Frontiers in Psychology
development
motor control
anticipation
cultural learning
embodied intersubjectivity
Japan and Scotland
author_facet Koichi eNegayama
Jonathan T. Delafield-Butt
Keiko eMomose
Konomi eIshijima
Noriko eKawahara
Erin eLux
Andrew eMurphy
Kaliarntas eKonstantinos
author_sort Koichi eNegayama
title Embodied Intersubjective Engagement in Mother-infant Tactile Communication: A cross-cultural study of Japanese and Scottish mother-infant behaviours during infant pick-up.
title_short Embodied Intersubjective Engagement in Mother-infant Tactile Communication: A cross-cultural study of Japanese and Scottish mother-infant behaviours during infant pick-up.
title_full Embodied Intersubjective Engagement in Mother-infant Tactile Communication: A cross-cultural study of Japanese and Scottish mother-infant behaviours during infant pick-up.
title_fullStr Embodied Intersubjective Engagement in Mother-infant Tactile Communication: A cross-cultural study of Japanese and Scottish mother-infant behaviours during infant pick-up.
title_full_unstemmed Embodied Intersubjective Engagement in Mother-infant Tactile Communication: A cross-cultural study of Japanese and Scottish mother-infant behaviours during infant pick-up.
title_sort embodied intersubjective engagement in mother-infant tactile communication: a cross-cultural study of japanese and scottish mother-infant behaviours during infant pick-up.
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2015-02-01
description This study examines the early development of cultural differences in a simple, embodied and intersubjective engagement between mothers putting down, picking up, and carrying their infants between Japan and Scotland. Eleven Japanese and 10 Scottish mothers with their 6- and then 9-month-old infants participated. Video and motion analyses were employed to measure motor patterns of mothers’ approach to their infants, as well as their infants’ collaborative responses during put-down, pick-up and carry phases. Japanese and Scottish mothers approached their infants with different styles and their infants responded differently to the short duration of separation during the trial. A greeting-like behavior of the arms and hands was prevalent in Scottish mothers’ approach, but not in Japanese mothers’ approach. Japanese mothers typically kneeled before making the final reach to pick up their children, giving a closer, apparently gentler final approach of torso than Scottish mothers who bent at the waist in larger movements of the torso. Measures of the gap closure between the mother’s hand to infant’s head revealed variably longer duration and distance gap closures with greater velocity by Scottish mothers than by Japanese mothers. Further, the sequence of Japanese mothers’ coordinated body actions on approach, contact, pick-up, and hold was more coordinated at six months than at nine months. Scottish mothers were generally more variable on approach. Measures of infant participation and expressivity indicate more active participation in the negotiation during the separation and pick-up phases by Scottish infants. This paper demonstrates a culturally different onset of development of joint attention in pick-up. These differences reflect cultures of every-day interaction.
topic development
motor control
anticipation
cultural learning
embodied intersubjectivity
Japan and Scotland
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2015.00066/full
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