Infants’ use of the index finger for social and non-social purposes during the first two years of life: A cross-cultural study

IF 1.9 3区 心理学 Q3 PSYCHOLOGY, DEVELOPMENTAL Infant Behavior & Development Pub Date : 2024-04-23 DOI:10.1016/j.infbeh.2024.101953
Irena Lovcevic , Marina Kammermeier , Junko Kanero , Yuan Fang , Yan Dong , Sho Tsuji , Markus Paulus
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Abstract

The emergence of the pointing gesture is a major developmental milestone in human infancy. Pointing fosters preverbal communication and is key for language and theory of mind development. Little is known about its ontogenetic origins and whether its pathway is similar across different cultures. The goal of this study was to examine the theoretical proposal that social pointing is preceded by a non-social use of the index finger and later becomes a social-communicative gesture. Moreover, the study investigated to which extent the emergence of social pointing differs cross-culturally. We assessed non-social index-finger use and social pointing in 647 infants aged 3- to 24 months from 4 different countries (China, Germany, Japan, and Türkiye). Non-social index-finger use and social pointing increased with infants’ age, such that social pointing became more dominant than non-social index-finger use with age. Whereas social pointing was reported across countries, its reported frequency differed between cultures with significantly greater social pointing frequency in infants from Türkiye, China, and Germany compared to Japanese infants. Our study supports theoretical proposals of the dominance of non-social index-finger use during early infancy with social pointing becoming more prominent as infants get older. These findings contribute to our understanding of infants’ use of their index finger for social and non-social purposes during the first two years of life.

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婴儿在出生后头两年将食指用于社交和非社交目的:跨文化研究
指点手势的出现是人类婴儿期发展的一个重要里程碑。指向手势促进了前语言交流,是语言和思维理论发展的关键。人们对其本体起源及其在不同文化中的发展路径是否相似知之甚少。本研究的目的是对 "社会性指点 "这一理论进行研究,即在 "社会性指点 "之前,先是食指的非社会性使用,之后才成为一种社会性交流手势。此外,本研究还探讨了社交指法的出现在多大程度上存在跨文化差异。我们对来自 4 个不同国家(中国、德国、日本和土耳其)的 647 名 3 至 24 个月大的婴儿进行了非社交性食指使用和社交性指点的评估。随着婴儿年龄的增长,非社交性食指的使用和社交性手指的使用都在增加,因此随着年龄的增长,社交性手指的使用比非社交性食指的使用更占优势。虽然社交手指的使用在不同国家都有报道,但不同文化背景的婴儿使用社交手指的频率却不尽相同,土耳其、中国和德国的婴儿使用社交手指的频率明显高于日本婴儿。我们的研究支持以下理论建议:在婴儿早期,非社交性食指的使用占主导地位,随着年龄的增长,社交性手指的使用会变得更加突出。这些研究结果有助于我们了解婴儿在出生后头两年中使用食指进行社交和非社交活动的情况。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Infant Behavior & Development
Infant Behavior & Development PSYCHOLOGY, DEVELOPMENTAL-
CiteScore
4.10
自引率
4.80%
发文量
94
期刊介绍: Infant Behavior & Development publishes empirical (fundamental and clinical), theoretical, methodological and review papers. Brief reports dealing with behavioral development during infancy (up to 3 years) will also be considered. Papers of an inter- and multidisciplinary nature, for example neuroscience, non-linear dynamics and modelling approaches, are particularly encouraged. Areas covered by the journal include cognitive development, emotional development, perception, perception-action coupling, motor development and socialisation.
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