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The effect of play task on maternal touch patterns when interacting with their 12 months-old infants: An exploratory study

The effect of play task on maternal touch patterns when interacting with their 12 months-old infants: An exploratory study

Serra, Juliana

;

Miguel, Helga

;

Moura, Ana Alexandra

; Sampaio, Adriana;

Pereira, Alfredo F

| Elsevier | 2020 | DOI

Artigo de Jornal

Multiple studies have demonstrated the critical role of touch in human development and the impact of mother's tactile input for an infant's well-being. However, the literature lacks a detailed description of maternal touch behavior during play tasks. Our study examined maternal touch patterns during mother-infant interactions. We analyzed the touch behavior of 41 mothers while they interacted with their 12-month-old infants, in a structured social interaction, composed of three tasks: (1) free play with toys, (2) free play without toys, and (3) object play with a challenging toy. Every touch performed by the mother was segmented and categorized using the Ordinalized Mother Touch Scale (OMTS Category). In a 3 (Play Task) x 8 (OMTS Category) ANOVA, all effects were significant. We found that, in the free play without toys task, mother's use of touch is highly frequent (M = 71 %), when compared to object-oriented tasks. Mothers also adjusted to object-oriented task difficulty: they touched almost twice as much in the challenging play task as in the free play with toys (M = 26 % vs. M = 14 %). In addition, the different play tasks influenced the proportion of time mothers used particular categories of touch. In summary, our study found that mothers' touch behavior depends on the play task demands (non-object oriented vs. object oriented) changing in terms of frequency but also in the mother's use of different categories of touch.
MWe wish to thank all the parents and infants who participated in the study and this study was conducted at Psychology Research Centre (UID/PSI/01662/2013), University of Minho, and supported by the Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology and the Portuguese Ministry of Science, Technology and Higher Education through national funds and co-financed by FEDER through COMPETE2020 under the PT2020 Partnership Agreement (POCI-01-0145-FEDER-007653). This research was also supported by: PhD grants from Portuguese Science and Technology Foundation to JS (PD/BD/142819/2018) and HM (SFRH/BD/86694/2012), re search grants PTDC/MHC-PCN/1530/2014 and IF/00217/2013 attributed to AP.

Publicação

Ano de Publicação: 2020

Editora: Elsevier

Identificadores

ISSN: 0163-6383