Publication | Closed Access
Rural NSO and German middle-class mothers’ interaction with their 3- and 6-month-old infants: A longitudinal cross-cultural analysis.
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Citations
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References
2015
Year
Parental CareFamily InvolvementEducationRural Nso MothersCultural FactorSocial SciencesDevelopmental PsychologyFamily InteractionHuman DevelopmentLongitudinal Cross-cultural AnalysisSocial-emotional DevelopmentRural NsoNso MothersChild PsychologyBehavioral SciencesEarly Childhood DevelopmentGerman Middle-class MothersChild DevelopmentCultureCultural DifferencesSocial BehaviorSociologyParentingDevelopmental ScienceAnthropologyCultural Anthropology
This study aims to analyze culture-specific development of maternal interactional behavior longitudinally. Rural Cameroonian Nso mothers (n = 72) and German middle-class mothers (n = 106) were observed in free-play interactions with their 3- and 6-month-old infants. Results reveal the expected shift from a social to a nonsocial focus only in the German middle-class mothers' play interactions but not the rural Nso mothers' play. Nso mothers continue their proximal interactional style with a focus on body contact and body stimulation, whereas German middle-class mothers prefer a distal style of interaction with increasing object-centeredness. These cultural differences are in line with broader cultural models and become more accentuated as the infants grow older.
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