Maternal self-efficacy and infant attachment: integrating physiology, perceptions, and behavior |
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Authors: | W L Donovan L A Leavitt |
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Institution: | Waisman Center on Mental Retardation and Human Development, University of Wisconsin--Madison 53705. |
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Abstract: | 48 mothers of 5-month-old infants were asked to estimate their control over the termination of an infant cry in a laboratory-simulated child-care task. Mothers who greatly overestimated their control differed from low or moderate "illusion-of-control" mothers by exhibiting a depression-prone attributional style, a depressed mood state, perceiving the father as participating less in child care, and responding to impending infant cries with heart-rate acceleration characteristic of aversive conditioning. At age 16 months, 40 of the mother-infant pairs participated in the Ainsworth Strange Situation. Insecure infant attachment at 16 months was associated with maternal perception of overcontrol, depressed mood state, and aversive conditioning to the impending cry in the laboratory task at the 5-month period. |
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