Longitudinal interplay of young children's negative affectivity and maternal interaction quality in the context of unequal psychosocial resources

Publication date: Available online 11 March 2019Source: Infant Behavior and DevelopmentAuthor(s): Jan-David Freund, Anja Linberg, Sabine WeinertAbstractInteraction quality and child temperament predict early and later child development. Research hints at transactional interrelations of both aspects but lacks adequate data to examine this assumption. Maternal psychosocial resources are suspected moderators in this context but rarely taken into account. Drawing on data of the German National Educational Panel Study we conducted a cross-lagged panel analysis on the longitudinal interplay of maternal interaction quality and children's negative affectivity at 6–8, 16–18, and 25–27 months and compared mothers with and without accumulated strains. Both variables showed moderate to high structural and rank order stability over time and low but increasing connections. In the case of accumulated stress factors, interaction quality is clearly impaired and high negative affectivity acts as an additional burden while low negative affectivity helps strained mothers to maintain higher interaction quality but only in the first year of life.
Source: Infant Behavior and Development - Category: Child Development Source Type: research