“…There is evidence (as summarized by Crouch, Skowronski, Milner, & Harris, 2008), that parents who perceive their infant's cries as excessive are more likely to respond abusively, however, since the majority of families with inconsolably crying infants survive these early months safe, healthy, and with secure, responsive parent-infant interactions in place, clearly there is more to consider that the frequency, duration, or intensity of the infant's cry. Parent characteristics that interfere with responsivity in the infant-parent dyad include depression, addiction, and other psychopathology that results in barriers to emotional availability, parent-child intersubjectivity, and parent self-regulation (Beeghly, & Tronick, 1994;Easterbrooks, Biesecker, & Lyons-Ruth, 2000;Kogan & Carter, 1996;Steina et al, 2010;Trevarthen & Aiteken, 2001;Tronick, 2007). Targeting parents who struggle with pathologic obstacles to adaptive dyadic function is a necessary and effective intervention strategy.…”