Publication | Closed Access
The Development of Sibling Relationships in Infancy: A Short-Term Longitudinal Study
87
Citations
11
References
1978
Year
Family MedicineParental CarePeer RelationshipEducationEarly Childhood EducationBehavioral DevelopmentPsychologySocial SciencesDevelopmental PsychologyFamily RelationshipFamily InteractionCognitive DevelopmentSocial-emotional DevelopmentBehavioral IssueBehavioural ProblemLaboratory PlayroomFamily RelationshipsChild PsychologyBehavioral SciencesSocial SkillsEarly Childhood DevelopmentShort-term Longitudinal StudyInfant CognitionChild DevelopmentSibling-directed BehaviorSocial BehaviorDevelopmental ScienceParentingFamily Dynamic
24 infants and their preschool-aged siblings were observed in a laboratory playroom in the presence of their parents. Observations took place when the infants were 12 months old and again 6 months later. Analysis of the social behavior revealed that, at both ages, the children assumed differentiable roles in their interactions: The infants "followed" by observing and imitating while the preschoolers "led" by drawing the infants' attention and by assertive dominance. Over time, infants became increasingly willing to direct social behaviors toward their siblings. There was remarkable behavioral stability across time, with the infants' early propensities seemingly causally related to later pre-schoolers' behavior. Older girls directed more social behaviors to siblings than boys did. The amount of parent-directed behavior was affected by the number of adults present, whereas the amount of sibling-directed behavior was unaffected.
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