Abstract

A milestone of child development is theory of mind (ToM): the ability to attribute mental states, especially beliefs and desires, to other persons and to understand that their behavior is guided by mental states. The learning process about the mental world also takes place in social communication and interaction, beginning in infancy. Infancy is assumed to be a sensitive period for the development of social skills through interaction. Due to limited self-regulatory skills, infants depend on sensitive behavior of their caregivers to regulate affective states and physiological arousal, and in turn, mutually regulated affects allow the infant to gradually acquire the capability to self-regulate negative affective states. Effective and adequate affect regulation is an important prerequisite for environmental interaction and thus for the development of socio-emotional skills. The present study investigated the relation of self-regulatory abilities in infancy and later ToM in pre-school aged children of clinically depressed mothers and healthy controls. The sample comprised of N = 55 mother–child dyads, n = 22 diagnosed with postpartum or lifetime depression according to DSM-IV and n = 33 healthy controls. Mother–infant-interaction was videotaped during the Face-to-Face Still-Face paradigm. At 3 and 42 months postpartum mothers were interviewed with the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV Axis I Disorders (SCID-I) to evaluate maternal psychopathological status according to DSM-IV. At the age of M = 4.0 years, children’s ToM abilities were assessed using content-false-belief and location-false-belief tasks. The results of this study show that contrary to our hypotheses, maternal depression did not impair the development of children’s ToM-abilities per se. Rather, an interaction effect highlights the role of infant’s self-comforting behavior during mother–infant interaction in infancy (3 months postpartum) for ToM-development at pre-school age assessed with the Maxi-task; this association was distinct for female in comparison to male children. The results of this longitudinal study shed light on the discussion, how maternal depression influences child development and point in the direction that self-comforting behaviors in infancy can also be seen as a resource.

Highlights

  • An essential domain of children’s cognitive development is the ability to attribute mental states, especially beliefs and desires, to other persons and to understand that their behavior is guided by such mental states (Premack and Woodruff, 1978)

  • Carpendale and Lewis (2004) argue that children develop social cognition through triadic interaction and the child’s environment: learning about the mental world takes place during social communication and interaction, the caregiver functions as a social partner presenting mental state concepts, whereby the child gradually develops an understanding about the inner world and acquires the knowledge that individuals can have beliefs that differ from one to another

  • Exploratory, we evaluated if infant self-comforting behaviors mediated between diagnostic group and the theory of mind (ToM) measures using conditional process analyses via the SPSS R Makro “PROCESS”

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Summary

Introduction

An essential domain of children’s cognitive development is the ability to attribute mental states, especially beliefs and desires, to other persons and to understand that their behavior is guided by such mental states (Premack and Woodruff, 1978). This so-called theory of mind (ToM) develops between 3 and 5 years of age (Wellman et al, 2001). That infants show increased self-comforting behaviors if caregivers are unable to co-regulate infant’s affect (e.g., due to psychiatric disorders) (Granat et al, 2017). With regard to children’s ToM, Fonagy et al (2002) assume, that it can only develop on the basis of adequate affect regulation competencies

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