Abstract

The purpose of the present study was to investigate the communicative functions of mutual touch during mother-infant interactions and their relation with infants’ affect and the quality of the mother-infant relationship. The two normal periods of the Still-Face procedure were examined for mothers and their 5½-month-old full-term (n=40) and very low-birthweight/preterm (VLBW/preterm; n=40) infants. The Functions of Mother-Infant Mutual Touch Scale was used to code the function of each mutual touch. Results indicated that full-term infant-mother dyads spent significantly more time engaged in playful and regulatory mutual touch compared to VLBW/preterm infant-mother dyads who spent significantly more time engaged in attention-centered, unbalanced, and guided mutual touch. Infant smiling was found to significantly co-occur with playful mutual touch for both the full-term and VLBW/preterm infants, while fretting co-occurred with unbalanced mutual touch for VLBW/preterm infants. Higher levels of maternal sensitivity and regulatory mutual touch were associated for full-term dyads, while lower levels of maternal sensitivity were associated with unbalanced mutual touch for VLBW/preterm dyads. Results from this study enable a more comprehensive understanding of the functions of mutual touching, and suggest key differences in which mutual touching behaviours are organized with infants’ affect and relationship dimensions between mothers and their infants.

Highlights

  • Title The functions of mutual touch in full-term and very low-birthweight/preterm infant-mother dyads: Associations with infant affect and emotional availability during face-to-face interactions

  • The present study was designed to examine the functions of mutual touch during face-to-face interactions between mothers and their 51⁄2-month-old full-term and Very low-birthweight (VLBW)/preterm infants in order to achieve a deeper and more comprehensive understanding of the communicative roles of touch during early motherinfant social exchanges

  • Our findings underscore the importance of the functions of mutual touch and suggest key differences in which mutual touching behaviors are organized with infants’ affect and relationship dimensions between full-term and VLBW/preterm infant-mother dyads

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Summary

Introduction

Title The functions of mutual touch in full-term and very low-birthweight/preterm infant-mother dyads: Associations with infant affect and emotional availability during face-to-face interactions. The Functions of Mutual Touch in Full-Term and Very LowBirthweight/Preterm Infant-Mother Dyads: Associations with Infant Affect and Emotional Availability During Face-to-Face Interactions. The purpose of the present study was to investigate the communicative functions of mutual touch during mother-infant interactions and their relation with infants’ affect and the quality of the mother-infant relationship. Results indicated that full-term infant-mother dyads spent significantly more time engaged in playful and regulatory mutual touch compared to VLBW/preterm infant-mother dyads who spent significantly more time engaged in attention-centered, unbalanced, and guided mutual touch. Results from this study enable a more comprehensive understanding of the functions of mutual touching, and suggest differences in which mutual touching behaviors are organized with infants’ affect and relationship dimensions between mothers and their infants. The SF period is a time during which mothers appear emotionally unavailable, despite being physically present (Mantis, Mercuri, Stack, & Field, 2018; Stack, 2010)

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