A Micro-Analytic Approach to Parent-Child Reminiscing

被引:3
|
作者
Svane, R. P. [1 ]
Kingo, O. S. [1 ]
Krojgaard, P. [1 ]
机构
[1] Aarhus Univ, Ctr Autobiog Memory Res, Dept Psychol & Behav Sci, Aarhus, Denmark
基金
新加坡国家研究基金会;
关键词
Parent-child reminiscing; High elaborative reminiscing style; Elaboration; Repetition; Confirmation; Contingency analyses; AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL MEMORY; GENDER-DIFFERENCES; TRAINING MOTHERS; MATERNAL STYLE; EMOTION-RICH; LANGUAGE; CONVERSATIONS; CONTEXTS; SUPPORT; ATTACHMENT;
D O I
10.1016/j.cogdev.2020.101004
中图分类号
B844 [发展心理学(人类心理学)];
学科分类号
040202 ;
摘要
The reminiscing literature has for decades highlighted the positive effect of the high elaborative reminiscing style on children's autobiographical memory. However, very little is known about the direct, reciprocal influences of parents' and children's utterances on each other. Using a micro analytic approach, the current study aimed to investigate a) how likely children were to provide memory information directly following parental elaborative, repetitive, and confirming utterance types, and b) how likely parents were to respond to children's memory information and verbal placeholders with elaborations, repetitions, and confirmations. Eighty-eight (N = 88) mothers and fathers participated in the study with their 4-year-old children. The micro-analyses revealed that children were most likely to provide memory information directly following parental open-ended elaborative and repetitive questions, and positive confirmations. Thus, through their open-ended questions and confirmations parents promoted the reciprocal, joint process of remembering which appeared highly facilitative of children's autobiographical remembering.
引用
收藏
页数:16
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Parent-child reminiscing locates the self in the past
    Fivush, R
    Nelson, K
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2006, 24 : 235 - 251
  • [2] Parent-child reminiscing and the construction of a subjective self
    Fivush, R
    Haden, CA
    DEVELOPMENT OF SOCIAL COGNITION AND COMMUNICATION, 2005, : 315 - 335
  • [3] Narrative structure and emotional references in parent-child reminiscing: associations with child gender, temperament, and the quality of parent-child interactions
    Bost, Kelly
    Choi, Eunsil
    Wong, Maria
    EARLY CHILD DEVELOPMENT AND CARE, 2010, 180 (1-2) : 139 - 156
  • [4] Functions of parent-child reminiscing about emotionally negative events
    Fivush, R
    Berlin, LJ
    Sales, JM
    Mennuti-Washburn, J
    Cassidy, J
    MEMORY, 2003, 11 (02) : 179 - 192
  • [5] Gender and parental involvement in parent-child reminiscing in a Scandinavian sample
    Svane, Riikka P.
    Olesen, Marie Josefine R.
    Kingo, Osman S.
    Krojgaard, Peter
    SCANDINAVIAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY, 2021, 62 (02) : 159 - 169
  • [6] Exploring the relationship between parent mental health and parent-child emotion reminiscing
    Russell, Sophie
    Bird, Amy L.
    McNamara, Josephine
    Herbert, Jane S.
    EARLY CHILD DEVELOPMENT AND CARE, 2023, 193 (07) : 921 - 938
  • [7] A MICRO-ANALYTIC PERSPECTIVE
    HOPPER, R
    DRUMMOND, K
    CRITICAL STUDIES IN MASS COMMUNICATION, 1988, 5 (02): : 163 - 166
  • [8] Developing narrative structure in parent-child reminiscing across the preschool years
    Haden, CA
    Haine, RA
    Fivush, R
    DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 1997, 33 (02) : 295 - 307
  • [9] The Association Between Parent-child Reminiscing and Children's Emotion Knowledge
    van Bergen, Penny
    Salmon, Karen
    NEW ZEALAND JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY, 2010, 39 (01) : 51 - 56
  • [10] Flooded by a wall of water: parent-child reminiscing about local environment and unwanted changes
    Sarrica, Mauro
    Roseti, Alice
    Brondi, Sonia
    Cervelli, Pierluigi
    Leone, Giovanna
    QUALITATIVE RESEARCH IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2016, 13 (03) : 209 - 230