Joanna C Buryn-Weitzel, Sophie Marshall, Eve Holden, Santa Atim, Ed Donnellan, Kirsty E Graham, Maggie Hoffman, Michael Jurua, Charlotte V Knapper, Nicole J Lahiff, Anna Nador, Josephine Paricia, Florence Tusiime, Claudia Wilke, Bailey R House, Katie E Slocombe
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We examined cultural variations in mother's helping-related parenting practices toward 14- and 18-month-olds and infants' actual helping in experimental tasks at 18 months. We then asked whether maternal parenting practices and socialization goals predicted individual variation in infant helping. We found that U.K. mothers scaffolded infant helping using a larger range of strategies than Ugandan mothers, but expecting an infant to help was more common in Uganda than in the United Kingdom. Moreover, we found that the Ugandan infants were more likely and often quicker to help an adult in need than the U.K. infants. Finally, we found that maternal scaffolding behaviors positively predicted individual variation in infant helping at 18 months in the United Kingdom, but not in Uganda. By contrast, maternal alignment with relational socialization goals at 11 months positively predicted infant helping at 18 months in the Ugandan, but not in the U.K., sample. These results indicate that early instrumental helping behavior varies across societies and that maternal socialization goals and scaffolding behaviors can shape infant helping in culturally specific ways. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
包括工具性帮助在内的亲社会行为在发育早期就出现了,但父母的态度和做法在不同文化背景下形成早期帮助的过程中所起的作用尚未得到很好的理解。我们采用纵向的方法来调查两个不同文化群体的母亲早期帮助社会化。参与者是来自英国约克城/郊区(43名婴儿:21名女性,22名男性)和乌干达马辛迪农村地区(39名婴儿:22名女性,17名男性)的母婴二人组。我们研究了母亲对14个月和18个月大的婴儿的帮助相关的育儿实践的文化差异,以及18个月大的婴儿在实验任务中的实际帮助。然后,我们询问母亲的育儿实践和社会化目标是否预测了婴儿帮助的个体差异。我们发现,与乌干达母亲相比,英国母亲使用更广泛的策略来帮助婴儿,但期望婴儿帮助在乌干达比在英国更常见。此外,我们发现乌干达的婴儿比英国的婴儿更有可能更快地帮助有需要的成年人。最后,我们发现,在英国,母亲的脚手架行为积极地预测了18个月时婴儿帮助的个体差异,但在乌干达则不然。相比之下,在乌干达的样本中,母亲在11个月时与关系社会化目标的一致性积极地预测了婴儿在18个月时的帮助,但在英国没有。这些结果表明,早期工具性帮助行为在不同的社会中是不同的,母亲的社会化目标和脚手架行为可以以特定的文化方式塑造婴儿的帮助。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA,版权所有)。
Maternal socialization and infant helping in Uganda and the United Kingdom.
Prosocial behavior, including instrumental helping, emerges early in development, but the role parental attitudes and practices take in shaping the emergence of early helping across different cultural contexts is not well understood. We took a longitudinal approach to investigate maternal socialization of early helping across two different cultural groups. Participants were mother-infant dyads from urban/suburban York, United Kingdom (43 infants: 21 females, 22 males) and the rural Masindi District, Uganda (39 infants: 22 females, 17 males). We examined cultural variations in mother's helping-related parenting practices toward 14- and 18-month-olds and infants' actual helping in experimental tasks at 18 months. We then asked whether maternal parenting practices and socialization goals predicted individual variation in infant helping. We found that U.K. mothers scaffolded infant helping using a larger range of strategies than Ugandan mothers, but expecting an infant to help was more common in Uganda than in the United Kingdom. Moreover, we found that the Ugandan infants were more likely and often quicker to help an adult in need than the U.K. infants. Finally, we found that maternal scaffolding behaviors positively predicted individual variation in infant helping at 18 months in the United Kingdom, but not in Uganda. By contrast, maternal alignment with relational socialization goals at 11 months positively predicted infant helping at 18 months in the Ugandan, but not in the U.K., sample. These results indicate that early instrumental helping behavior varies across societies and that maternal socialization goals and scaffolding behaviors can shape infant helping in culturally specific ways. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).
期刊介绍:
Developmental Psychology ® publishes articles that significantly advance knowledge and theory about development across the life span. The journal focuses on seminal empirical contributions. The journal occasionally publishes exceptionally strong scholarly reviews and theoretical or methodological articles. Studies of any aspect of psychological development are appropriate, as are studies of the biological, social, and cultural factors that affect development. The journal welcomes not only laboratory-based experimental studies but studies employing other rigorous methodologies, such as ethnographies, field research, and secondary analyses of large data sets. We especially seek submissions in new areas of inquiry and submissions that will address contradictory findings or controversies in the field as well as the generalizability of extant findings in new populations. Although most articles in this journal address human development, studies of other species are appropriate if they have important implications for human development. Submissions can consist of single manuscripts, proposed sections, or short reports.