2019
DOI: 10.1111/aman.13284
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Toward an Integrated Anthropology of Infant Sleep

Abstract: This article provides a novel synthesis of anthropological research on infant sleep, focusing on work in biological and sociocultural anthropology in the past decade. First, we briefly review early biological anthropological research into infant sleep from 1987 to 2007, which provided the evidence base for the argument that proximate parent-infant sleep combined with lactation represents a complex set of adaptations that constitute the human evolutionary norm. This work challenged the Western pediatric infant … Show more

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Cited by 39 publications
(36 citation statements)
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References 128 publications
(180 reference statements)
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“…From an anthropological approach, studies of human infant sleep must focus on its biological and sociocultural context, particularly the “cultural normalcy” of breastsleeping (Ball et al., 2019). Current knowledge about infant sleep is based on assumptions made by 20th-century Western experts based on then-current cultural practices, which emphasized that optimal, desirable, “normal” sleep for infants was solitary and continuous sleep without night waking.…”
Section: The Evolutionary/anthropological View Of “Normal” Sleepmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…From an anthropological approach, studies of human infant sleep must focus on its biological and sociocultural context, particularly the “cultural normalcy” of breastsleeping (Ball et al., 2019). Current knowledge about infant sleep is based on assumptions made by 20th-century Western experts based on then-current cultural practices, which emphasized that optimal, desirable, “normal” sleep for infants was solitary and continuous sleep without night waking.…”
Section: The Evolutionary/anthropological View Of “Normal” Sleepmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…What the limits are and how far they can be stretched without interfering with normal physiological and neurodevelopment is not currently known. Thus, an approach to “normal” human infant sleep based in understanding breastsleeping as a complex set of maternal and infant adaptations for shared, social sleep that is species-typical for humans (Ball et al., 2019) is necessary.…”
Section: The Evolutionary/anthropological View Of “Normal” Sleepmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The global distribution of cultures in which the norm is for infants to sleep alone suggests that mother-infant physical separation at night is historically recent, and is part of a model of infant care which emphasises early independence currently found in many Western European societies and nations colonised by Western European people in the last few hundred years [12]. Mother-infant separation at night is uncommon in other cultures [13].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%