Abstract
In a longitudinal study with 73 mothers and their second-born child, stability and main-level differences between measures of maternal sensitivity across settings and over time were examined. Furthermore, the predictability of harsh discipline by these different maternal sensitivity measures was studied. Maternal sensitivity was assessed at three and six months during bathing, free play on mother's lap and the baseline and reunion episode of the Still Face Paradigm (SFP; Tronick, Als, Adamson, Wise, & Brazelton, Citation1978). Harsh discipline was observed during three home visits in the second year of life. Results showed a single underlying factor for all maternal sensitivity settings at both time points and significant stability over time. Harsh discipline was predicted by maternal sensitivity at three months, which was fully mediated by maternal sensitivity at six months. Early failure to respond appropriately to infant signals is an important indicator of risk for future harsh parenting.
Acknowledgements
This study was conducted with grants from the Rommert Casimir Institute (Research Institute of Education and Child Studies at Leiden University, the Netherlands), and by The Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research NWO in the form of a VENI grant awarded to Judi Mesman. Support from the European Research Council (Starting Grant to Judi Mesman), and NWO (VIDI and VICI to Marian Bakermans-Kranenburg, and SPINOZA Prize to Marinus van IJzendoorn), is gratefully acknowledged.