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Depressed mothers' and their infants' interactions with nondepressed partners

✍ Scribed by Alex Martinez; Julie Malphurs; Tiffany Field; Jeffrey Pickens; Regina Yando; Debra Bendell; Claudia Valle; Daniel Messinger


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1996
Tongue
English
Weight
447 KB
Volume
17
Category
Article
ISSN
0163-9641

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


Twenty depressed adolescent mothers were videotaped interacting with their own infant and with the infant of a nondepressed mother. In addition. nondepressed mothers were videotaped with their own infant as well as with the infant of a depressed mother. Depressed mothers showed less facial expressivity than nondepressed mothers and received less optimal interaction rating scale scores (a summary score for state, physical activity, head orientation, gaze, silence during gaze aversion, facial expressions, vocalizations, infantized behavior, contingent responsivity, and gameplaying). This occurred independent of whether they were interacting with their own infant versus an infant of a nondepressed mother, suggesting that depressed mothers display less optimal behaviors to infants in general. The infants of both depressed and nondepressed mothers received better head orientation and summary ratings when they were interacting with another mother, perhaps because the other mother was more novel. Infants of nondepressed mothers, in particular, had better summary ratings (state, physical activity, head onenta-


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