Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Part I The nature of emotional development
- Part II The unfolding of the emotions
- Part III Emotional development and individual adaptation
- 9 The social nature of emotional development
- 10 Attachment: the dyadic regulation of emotion
- 11 The emergence of the autonomous self: caregiver-guided self-regulation
- 12 The growth of self-regulation
- 13 Summation
- References
- Index
9 - The social nature of emotional development
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Part I The nature of emotional development
- Part II The unfolding of the emotions
- Part III Emotional development and individual adaptation
- 9 The social nature of emotional development
- 10 Attachment: the dyadic regulation of emotion
- 11 The emergence of the autonomous self: caregiver-guided self-regulation
- 12 The growth of self-regulation
- 13 Summation
- References
- Index
Summary
Each partner then progressively escalates – kicking the other partner into higher orbit … The exchange occurs in overlapping waves, where the mother's smile elicits the infant's, reanimating her next smile at an even higher level.
Stern (1990)All these holding experiences are opportunities for the infant to learn how to contain himself.
Brazelton et al. (1974)The progress of emotional development is intertwined with advances in social development. This is not only because the emotions unfold in a social context, but because broader aspects of emotional development, including the regulation of affect, take place within the matrix of caregiving relationships. In fact, the general course of emotional development may be described as movement from dyadic regulation to self-regulation of emotion. Moreover, dyadic regulation represents a prototype for self-regulation; the roots of individual differences in the self-regulation of emotion lie within the distinctive patterns of dyadic regulation (Sroufe, 1989).
The development of the social individual proceeds through a series of phases, from the first weeks when there is little awareness even that some stimulation emanates from the outside environment, through a dawning awareness of self and others, to reciprocal relationships, to a responsive partnership in the preschool years, wherein the child has internalized social values and the beginnings of self-control.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Emotional DevelopmentThe Organization of Emotional Life in the Early Years, pp. 151 - 171Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1996