Parental communicative input as a protective factor in Bangladeshi families living in poverty: A multi-dimensional perspective

IF 3.1 1区 心理学 Q2 PSYCHOLOGY, DEVELOPMENTAL
Ran Wei, Eileen F. Sullivan, Fatema Begum, Navin Rahman, Fahmida Tofail, Rashidul Haque, Charles A. Nelson
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Studies from high-income populations have shown that stimulating, supportive communicative input from parents promote children's cognitive and language development. However, fewer studies have identified specific features of input supporting the healthy development of children growing up in low- or middle-income countries. The current study proposes and tests a multi-dimensional framework for understanding whether and how caregiver communicative input mediates the associations between socio-economic conditions and early development. We also examine how caregiver conceptual scaffolding and autonomy support uniquely and synergistically explain variation in child outcomes. Participants were 71 Bangladeshi families with five-year-olds who were exposed to a range of biological and psychosocial hazards from birth. Caregiver-child interactions during snack sharing and semi-structured play were coded for caregiver conceptual scaffolding, autonomy support, and child engagement. Findings indicate that the two dimensions of input were correlated, suggesting that caregivers who provided richer conceptual scaffolds were simultaneously more supportive of children's autonomy. Notably, conceptual scaffolding and autonomy support each mediated associations between maternal education and child verbal intelligence quotient (IQ) scores. Further, caregivers who supported greater autonomy in their children had children who participated in conversations more actively, and these children in turn had higher performance IQ scores. When considered simultaneously, conceptual scaffolding was associated with verbal IQ over and above autonomy support, whereas autonomy support related to child engagement, controlling for conceptual scaffolding. These findings shed new light on how environmental factors may support early development, contributing to the design of family-centered, culturally authentic interventions. A video abstract of this article can be viewed at https://youtu.be/9v_8sIv7ako

Research Highlights

  • Studies from high-income countries have identified factors mitigating the impacts of socio-economic risks on development. Such research is scarce in low- and middle-income countries.
  • The present study conceptualized and evaluated caregiver communicative input in Bangladeshi families along two interrelated yet distinct dimensions: conceptual scaffolding and autonomy support.
  • Conceptual scaffolding and autonomy support individually mediated associations between maternal education and child verbal IQ, shedding light on protective factors in families living in poverty.
  • Parents providing richer conceptual scaffolds were simultaneously more supportive of children's autonomy. However, the two dimensions each related to cognition and language through unique pathways.

Abstract Image

父母的交流投入是孟加拉贫困家庭的保护因素:多维视角
来自高收入人群的研究表明,来自父母的激励性、支持性交流输入可促进儿童的认知和语言发展。然而,较少研究能确定支持中低收入国家儿童健康成长的输入的具体特征。本研究提出并测试了一个多维框架,以了解照料者的交流输入是否以及如何介导社会经济条件与早期发展之间的联系。我们还研究了照料者的概念支架和自主支持如何独特地、协同地解释儿童结果的变化。我们的研究对象是 71 个孟加拉国家庭的五岁儿童,这些儿童从出生起就面临着一系列的生理和心理危害。在分享零食和半结构化游戏过程中,对照料者与儿童之间的互动进行了编码,包括照料者的概念支架、自主支持和儿童参与。研究结果表明,输入的两个维度是相关的,这表明提供更丰富概念支架的照料者同时也更支持儿童的自主性。值得注意的是,概念性支架和自主性支持分别在母亲教育和儿童言语智商(IQ)得分之间起到了中介作用。此外,支持儿童更多自主权的照顾者会让儿童更积极地参与对话,而这些儿童的智商表现得分也更高。同时考虑时,概念性支架与言语智商的相关性高于自主性支持,而自主性支持与儿童参与度相关,但概念性支架除外。这些发现为环境因素如何支持早期发展提供了新的启示,有助于设计以家庭为中心、具有文化真实性的干预措施。本文的视频摘要可在 https://youtu.be/9v_8sIv7ako 上观看。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
8.10
自引率
8.10%
发文量
132
期刊介绍: Developmental Science publishes cutting-edge theory and up-to-the-minute research on scientific developmental psychology from leading thinkers in the field. It is currently the only journal that specifically focuses on human developmental cognitive neuroscience. Coverage includes: - Clinical, computational and comparative approaches to development - Key advances in cognitive and social development - Developmental cognitive neuroscience - Functional neuroimaging of the developing brain
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