Nonlinear Dynamics, Psychology, and Life Sciences, Vol. 20, Iss. 4, Oct, 2016, pp. 485-508 @2016 Society for Chaos Theory in Psychology & Life Sciences Mother-Infant Verbal and Nonverbal Interaction as Predictor of Attachment: Nonlinear Dynamic Analyses Abstract: This longitudinal study examined flexibility in early mother-infant interaction at the
age of approximately 6 months (N=30) and whether flexibility indices predicted (in) secure child attachment
at 15 months. Dyadic flexibility was measured using dynamic systems-based modelling of patterns
during mother-child free play in terms of NDS variables derived from SSG: the propensity to
change states (dynamic flexibility), number of states visited (diversity) and predictability (dispersion).
Results showed significant discriminant functions on the attachment type groups, A, B & C, for the total grid,
which included verbal and non-verbal, and for the reciprocal verbal region. Specifically,
the prediction outcomes seem to work better in total grid for A-dyads and
in the reciprocal verbal region for B and C-dyads. Diversity emerged as the
most relevant index in dyadic flexibility: A-dyads showed the
least diversity, distinguished them from B-dyads in the verbal regions, (both the reciprocal and non-reciprocal,
child verbal-mother non-verbal one), and, from C-dyads in the reciprocal non-verbal region.
A-dyads showed remarkably low activity in the regions involving child verbal behavior,
showing that children who became avoidant attached at 15 months of age, were mostly silent at approximately 6 months,
when they interacted with their mothers. Findings in this study contribute to
advancing conceptually informed measurement of dyadic interaction to provide a new perspective on
maternal sensitivity and early markers of child insecure/secure attachment. Keywords: child attachment, maternal sensitivity, dyadic flexibility, nonlinear dynamic systems, gridware, state-space grid, early mother-child interaction, verbal-nonverbal |