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Regression Periods in Human infancy
 
 

Regression Periods in Human infancy [Hardcover]

Mikael Heimann (Editor), Frans X. Plooij (Editor)

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Book Description

0805840982 978-0805840988 May 1, 2003
Regression periods play a central role in the psychological development of the human baby. Studies of infants have identified 10 periods of regression, or a return to a high frequency of mother-infant contact, within the first 20 months of life. These periods of emotional insecurity in the child signal forthcoming periods of developmental advance and the emergence of an array of new skills as a consequence of parent-infant conflict over body contact and the renegotiation of old privileges.

Although the basic idea in this book is an old one, the authors believe that regression periods deserve further study and have identified four questions of central importance today:
*Can the phenomenon of regression periods as found by Dutch researchers in 1992 be replicated in other countries and cultures?
*What environmental conditions have an effect on these regression periods and how?
*Are there physical conditions in infants that show a non-linear distribution over age similar to regression periods?
*Have brain changes been detected since the review of Fischer & Rose (1994) at other ages than the six reported by them, and, if yes, how do these relate to the ages at which regression periods are found?

Forming the core of this book, the replication studies performed in Sweden, Spain, and England provide support that regression periods are a rreliable phenomenon and should be dealt with accordingly whenever developmental processes in infancy are discussed.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
data preparation, catalan infants, regression weeks, regression periods, perceptual control systems, rigid sleeping, perceptual control theory, illness peaks, direct observation measures, regressive periods, weekly questionnaire, swedish infants, negative vocalizations, reorganizing system, human infancy, developmental cognitive neuroscience, parental conditions, peak weeks
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New York, Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Cambridge University Press, The Netherlands, Kluwer Academic, Academic Press, Child Development, Oxford University Press, The Effects, Psychological Science, Developmental Psychology, Psychological Review, Human Nature, Basic Books, Koopmans-van Beinum, Van Geert, Psychology Press, Elsevier Science, Acta Paediatrica, American Behavioral Scientist, Early Human Development, Current Directions, Harvard University Press, Journal of Child Language, Mother-Infant Dyad
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Front Cover | Table of Contents | First Pages | Index | Surprise Me!
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