Applicability of a Novel Attunement Instrument and Its Relationship to Parental Sensitivity in Infants With and Without Visual Impairments — Stefania V. Vacaru (2022) | RDL Network
Applicability of a Novel Attunement Instrument and Its Relationship to Parental Sensitivity in Infants With and Without Visual Impairments
Article 2022 en
Authors
SV
Stefania V. Vacaru
AA
Andrea Urqueta Alfaro
NH
Nadia Hoffman
Abstract
1 min read
This study investigated the applicability of a novel instrument to assess parent-child attunement in free play interactions, in dyads with an infant with and without visual impairments (VI). We here report the findings on the reliability and applicability of the newly developed <i>Attune & Stimulate Mother-Infant 56-items Instrument (A&S M-I)</i> in two separate samples: one with infants with VI (<i>N</i> = 20) and one with typically sighted infants (<i>N</i> = 24). In addition, we assessed the contribution of parental sensitivity to attunement in dyadic interactions. The <i>A&S M-I</i> is an observational comprehensive instrument of behaviors that captures different body parts and their motility (i.e., finger movements, arm waving, and foot kicking), and different senses (i.e., audio, tactile, and visual). The appropriate responding of a parent to the child's signal (i.e., matching and containing) reflects the ability to attune in the dyad as well as parent's ability to stimulate the child to become engaged in the contact or activity. Consistency assessments revealed good reliability for maternal and infant behaviors, acceptable internal consistency and good test-retest reliability. Furthermore, both samples scored significantly above chance level on attunement, suggesting that the instrument captures parent-infant behavioral coordination, and VI was not related to parent-infant attunement. Lastly, a relation between parental sensitivity and attunement was found only in the TS sample. Altogether, these findings provide promising initial evidence of the applicability of the <i>A&S M-I</i> instrument for assessing dyadic attunement across different populations and ages. Having assessed the applicability of this observational instrument, future work should corroborate these findings in larger samples.
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