1997
DOI: 10.1080/10481889709539172
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Mother—infant interaction structures and presymbolic self‐ and object representations

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Cited by 307 publications
(137 citation statements)
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References 69 publications
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“…Mothers and infants do not exactly match facial expression or level of affective engagement (Malatesta et al, 1989;Tronick and Cohn, 1989). Instead, they match "direction of affective change" (Beebe, Lachmann, & Jaffe, 1997). Cohn and Beebe (1990) found each partner contingently responsive to the other's facial exchange within one-half second or less.…”
Section: Microanalyses Of Early Face-to-face Interactions and Clinicamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Mothers and infants do not exactly match facial expression or level of affective engagement (Malatesta et al, 1989;Tronick and Cohn, 1989). Instead, they match "direction of affective change" (Beebe, Lachmann, & Jaffe, 1997). Cohn and Beebe (1990) found each partner contingently responsive to the other's facial exchange within one-half second or less.…”
Section: Microanalyses Of Early Face-to-face Interactions and Clinicamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The schools from which the sample was derived espouse these values. In light of infant research that conceptualizes self-development in terms of both self and mutual regulation, it makes sense that these women use religion and spirituality to express individuality and to connect to the deceased (Beebe & Lachmann, 1994;Beebe, Lachmann, & Jaffe, 1997).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The infants early organizations and experiences are dependent on his/her emerging constitutional capacities and the mother's "good enough" responses. It may also be said that the infant's actualization of his/her constitutional capacities are contingent upon appropriate and timely maternal responses to the infant's needs and "expectancies" (11). Negatively speaking, severe early deprivation or impingement shatters the infant's global or basic trust (27, p. 249) and consequently obstructs the infant's constitutional capacities that organize body-me-caregiver representations into a relatively coherent self-structure (28).…”
Section: Early Infancymentioning
confidence: 99%