International audienceBackground: In developmental research, infants are commonly assumed to be early stakeholders in interactions with their caregivers. The tools that infants can use to interact with others vary from visual contact to smiling or vocalizing, and also include motor activity. However, surprisingly few studies have explored how the nature and context of social interactions affect infants' engagement in motor activity. Methods: We investigated the kinematic properties of foot and face movements produced by 11 infants aged between 5 and 9 months during six contrasting dyadic episodes (i.e. passive presence of a stranger or the infant's mother, weak or intense interaction with the stranger/mother as she sings a nursery play song...
This article reports the results of two experiments studying the effects of type of interaction on i...
Background: It is clear that early social interaction follows from mother-infant interaction after p...
Infants socially engage with others and observe others' social interactions from early in life. One ...
International audienceBackground: In developmental research, infants are commonly assumed to be earl...
Background: In developmental research, infants are commonly assumed to be early stakeholders in inte...
International audience<p>Bodily movements are an essential component of social interactions. However...
Historically, there has been relatively little concern with social interaction between children unde...
Face-to-face interaction between infants and their caregivers is a mainstay of developmental researc...
This study examined the unique and interactive roles of age and locomotor posture (crawling vs. walk...
Play has proved to have a central role in children’s development, most notably in rule learning (Pia...
The current study examined social behavior in the first year of life, focusing on developmental chan...
<p>Reaching is an important and early emerging motor skill that allows infants to interact with the ...
Fifty-nine healthy infants were filmed with their mothers and with a researcher at two, four, six an...
Note:The purpose of this research was to determine what changes could be effected in institutionaliz...
© 2015 The Authors. Matching the timing of one's movements to the movements of others has been propo...
This article reports the results of two experiments studying the effects of type of interaction on i...
Background: It is clear that early social interaction follows from mother-infant interaction after p...
Infants socially engage with others and observe others' social interactions from early in life. One ...
International audienceBackground: In developmental research, infants are commonly assumed to be earl...
Background: In developmental research, infants are commonly assumed to be early stakeholders in inte...
International audience<p>Bodily movements are an essential component of social interactions. However...
Historically, there has been relatively little concern with social interaction between children unde...
Face-to-face interaction between infants and their caregivers is a mainstay of developmental researc...
This study examined the unique and interactive roles of age and locomotor posture (crawling vs. walk...
Play has proved to have a central role in children’s development, most notably in rule learning (Pia...
The current study examined social behavior in the first year of life, focusing on developmental chan...
<p>Reaching is an important and early emerging motor skill that allows infants to interact with the ...
Fifty-nine healthy infants were filmed with their mothers and with a researcher at two, four, six an...
Note:The purpose of this research was to determine what changes could be effected in institutionaliz...
© 2015 The Authors. Matching the timing of one's movements to the movements of others has been propo...
This article reports the results of two experiments studying the effects of type of interaction on i...
Background: It is clear that early social interaction follows from mother-infant interaction after p...
Infants socially engage with others and observe others' social interactions from early in life. One ...