Abstract
In ambiguous situations, infants have the tendency to gather information from a social interaction partner to regulate their behavior [social referencing (SR)]. There are two main competing theories concerning SR’s function. According to social-cognitive information-seeking accounts, infants look at social interaction partners to gain information about the ambiguous situation. According to co-regulation accounts, infants look at social interaction partners to receive emotional support. This review provides an overview of the central developments in SR literature in the past years. We focus on the role of situational aspects such as familiarity of SR partners and situational threat, not only for SR (looking), but also for subsequent behavioral regulation (exploration, affect). As the competing accounts make different predictions concerning both contextual factors, this approach may reveal novel insights into the function of SR. Findings showed that a higher familiarity of SR partners consistently resulted in decreased looking (cf. social-cognitive accounts) and that higher threat remains largely understudied, but seemed to increase looking in the first few studies (cf. co-regulation accounts). Concerning behavioral regulation (exploration, affect) findings are mixed. We point out that moving toward a more complex situatedness may help to disentangle the heterogeneous results by considering the interaction between familiarity and threat rather than investigating the factors in isolation. From a general perspective, this review underlines the importance of situational factors and their interaction in eliciting a phenomenon, such as SR, but also in determining the nature of the phenomenon itself.
Highlights
Social referencing (SR) is the tendency of a subject to gather information from an informant in order to regulate one’s behavior towards an ambiguous referent for which a fully accurate evaluation is missing (Zarbatany and Lamb, 1985; Walden and Kim, 2005; Striano et al, 2006; Stenberg, 2009; Fawcett and Liszkowski, 2015; Schieler et al, 2018)
Baldwin and Moses have been pioneers in suggesting a stronger situatedness in investigating SR. This has led to a new direction in SR research, and respective findings give rise to new questions
We summarized research about the influence of two situational factors on SR – namely familiarity and threat
Summary
Social referencing (SR) is the tendency of a subject (infant) to gather information from an informant (social interaction partner) in order to regulate one’s behavior towards an ambiguous referent for which a fully accurate evaluation is missing (Zarbatany and Lamb, 1985; Walden and Kim, 2005; Striano et al, 2006; Stenberg, 2009; Fawcett and Liszkowski, 2015; Schieler et al, 2018). Going beyond an individualistic cognitive approach, they called for research on two questions: How does the (1) familiarity of the SR partner and (2) situational threat influence SR?1 As the accounts make different predictions about the influence of these two contextual conditions, the answer to these questions could provide critical novel insights into the function of SR, Baldwin and Moses (1996) argued. Before drawing conclusions regarding SR’s function, we first describe the two SR-accounts and their predictions for the role of both contextual factors for SR and for infants’ subsequent behavioral regulation (exploration of the referent and infants’ affective expressions).
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