Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
917339 Infant Behavior and Development 2013 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

This longitudinal study builds on existing research exploring the developmental course of infants’ negative reactivity to frustration in a sample of 84 irritable infants. We investigated whether infants’ negative reactivity to frustration differed during the first year as a function of infant attachment classification. Various elements of the designs of previous studies investigating negative reactivity and attachment preclude the strong conclusion that negative reactivity develops differently as a function of attachment. Thus, we utilized the same observational assessment of infant negative reactivity, conducted without parental involvement, at 5 and 12 months. One proposition, based in attachment theory (Bowlby, 1969 and Cassidy, 1994), is that relative to secure infants, insecure-avoidant infants come to minimize their negative emotional reactions, whereas insecure-ambivalent infants come to maximize their negative emotional reactions. As expected, we found that at 5 months, attachment groups did not differ in reactivity, but at 12 months, insecure-avoidant infants were the least reactive, followed by secure infants, and insecure-ambivalent infants were the most reactive. Results are discussed in terms of conceptualizing the development of emotion regulation and their implications for future research.

► We examine infant negative reactivity and attachment in irritable newborns. ► We tested whether infants minimize or maximize emotion based on attachment quality. ► Reactivity at 5 and 12 months were consistent with theory and our hypotheses. ► At 5 months, attachment groups did not differ in their negative reactivity. ► At 12 months, avoidant infants had the least reactivity and ambivalent the most.

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