PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Secure attachment to moms helps irritable babies interact with others

2011-08-31
(Press-News.org) Children with difficult temperaments are often the most affected by the quality of their relationships with their caregivers. New research suggests that highly irritable children who have secure attachments to their mothers are more likely to get along well with others than those who aren't securely attached.

These findings, from researchers at the University of Maryland, are published in the journal Child Development.

Researchers followed 84 infants from birth to age 2. About a third were characterized as highly irritable, while two-thirds were characterized as moderately irritable. The study also included their mostly low-income mothers. Irritability was measured using a test administered in the home within a month of the babies' births; the infants had to react to a series of events, including being undressed and hearing a bell ringing.

The researchers also measured infants' attachment at 12 months, based primarily on the babies' behavior when observed with their mothers. Securely attached infants were able to turn toward mom when distressed and use her for comfort, while insecurely attached infants were not.

When the children were 18 and 24 months, they were observed in a laboratory setting to assess how they responded to being around unfamiliar adults and toys.

The study found that for highly irritable babies, the quality of attachment between the children and their mothers predicted how the children responded to unfamiliar adults and toys. Highly irritable newborns were the most sociable as toddlers if they were securely attached and the least sociable as toddlers if they were insecurely attached. In addition, highly irritable infants who were insecurely attached were the least able to engage in exploration as toddlers. In contrast, the quality of infants' attachment was not related to either exploration or sociability in toddlers who were moderately irritable as newborns.

These findings suggest that infants who are highly irritable and can't use their mothers as a secure base have the greatest difficulty interacting with both people and objects. But highly irritable infants who can turn to their mothers for comfort and support have a greater tendency to be sociable in such situations.

The researchers suggest that interventions to help children become securely attached to their caregivers may be especially important for children who are highly irritable. Intervening in this way—for example, by using video feedback that helps parents become more aware of their infants' needs and respond sensitively—may be important to irritable children's ability to explore the world around them and engage with others.

INFORMATION:

The study was supported by the National Institute of Mental Health.

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Mother-son ties change over time, influence teen boys' behavior

2011-08-31
Relationships between mothers and their sons change during childhood and adolescence. However, not all relationships change in the same way, and how the relationships change may affect boys' behavior when they become teens. Those are the findings of a new longitudinal study of low-income families by researchers at Wayne State University, Oklahoma State University, the University of Pittsburgh, the University of Montreal, and the University of Oregon. The study appears in the journal Child Development. The researchers looked at 265 mother-son pairs from low-income families ...

Pardee Homes Offers Reduced Prices at Highlands Village; New Carmel Valley Townhomes From the Mid-$400,000s

Pardee Homes Offers Reduced Prices at Highlands Village; New Carmel Valley Townhomes From the Mid-$400,000s
2011-08-31
Pardee Homes has announced that they have reduced prices on move-in ready townhomes at Highlands Village at Carmel Country Highlands. The builder is offering this special for a limited time on their popular Plan 1 and Plan 1X models, and will also include $10,000 towards HOA dues or closing costs. "This is great time to buy and an exceptional opportunity to live the Carmel Valley lifestyle without the typical Carmel Valley price," said Rachel Collins, director of sales for Pardee Homes. "Coastal-close Highlands Village offers affordability, location, lifestyle ...

Simple blood test at high street opticians could help to diagnose diabetes

2011-08-31
A simple finger prick test during routine eye examinations at high street opticians could help to identify millions of people with previously undiagnosed Type 2 diabetes, according to new research. The researchers suggest earlier diagnosis could set people on the road to better management of the disease, which is the leading cause of blindness in the working age population, and that this could ultimately result in cost-savings for the NHS. The Durham University study suggests that screening for the condition in unconventional settings, such as opticians, chiropodists ...

Ghostwriting remains a fundamental problem in the medical literature

2011-08-31
An editorial this week in PLoS Medicine concludes that in the two years since extensive ghostwriting by pharmaceutical giant Wyeth to promote its hormone drug Prempro was exposed through litigation intervention by PLoS Medicine and The New York Times, medical ghostwriting remains a prevalent problem with few concrete solutions in sight. This week also sees the launch of the PLoS Ghostwriting Collection, which documents everything published across the PLoS journals on the topic. Among these are three new articles published earlier this month in PLoS Medicine that provide ...

New Stanford method reveals parts of bacterium genome essential to life

2011-08-31
STANFORD, Calif. — A team at the Stanford University School of Medicine has cataloged, down to the letter, exactly what parts of the genetic code are essential for survival in one bacterial species, Caulobacter crescentus. They found that 12 percent of the bacteria's genetic material is essential for survival under laboratory conditions. The essential elements included not only protein-coding genes, but also regulatory DNA and, intriguingly, other small DNA segments of unknown function. The other 88 percent of the genome could be disrupted without harming the bacteria's ...

Death rates in newborns remain shockingly high in Africa and India

2011-08-31
Neonatal mortality—deaths in newborns, aged 3 weeks and under— has declined in all regions of the world over the past two decades but in 2009, more than half of all neonatal deaths occurred in five countries—India, Nigeria, Pakistan, China, and the Democratic Republic of Congo. Furthermore, over the past 20 years, more than 4% of all babies born live in India died during the first month of life. These shocking findings come from a comprehensive and detailed analysis led by Mikkel Z Oestergaard, from the World Health Organization and partners published in this week's ...

Mobile phone data help track populations during disasters

2011-08-31
Mobile phone positioning data can be used to monitor population movements during disasters and outbreaks, according to a study published in this week's PLoS Medicine. The study, conducted by Linus Bengtsson and colleagues from the Karolinska Institute, Sweden and Columbia University, USA, finds that reports on the location of populations affected and in need of assistance can be generated within hours of receiving data. Population movements after disasters make it difficult to deliver essential relief assistance to the right places and at the right scale. In this geospatial ...

Rural areas at higher risk of dengue fever than cities

2011-08-31
In dengue-endemic areas such as South-East Asia, in contrast to conventional thinking, rural areas rather than cities may bear the highest burden of dengue fever—a viral infection that causes sudden high fever, severe headache, and muscle and joint pains, and can lead to a life-threatening condition, dengue hemorrhagic fever. In a study led by Wolf-Peter Schmidt from the Nagasaki Institute of Tropical Medicine, Japan, and published in this week's PLoS Medicine, the authors analysed a population in Kanh-Hoa Province in south-central Vietnam (~350,000 people) that was affected ...

Health systems research needs overhaul

2011-08-31
In the conclusion to a three-part series of articles addressing the current challenges and opportunities for the development of Health Policy and Systems Research (HPSR), Sara Bennett of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health in Baltimore USA and colleagues lay out an agenda for action to help build the field: 1) local actors, including policy-makers and researchers, must have a greater say in determining the nature of HPSR conducted; 2) a better shared understanding of theoretical frames and methodological approaches for HPSR, including journals, methods training, ...

Viruses in the human gut show dynamic response to diet

2011-08-31
August 31, 2011 – The digestive system is home to a myriad of viruses, but how they are involved in health and disease is poorly understood. In a study published online today in Genome Research (www.genome.org), researchers have investigated the dynamics of virus populations in the human gut, shedding new light on the gut "virome" and how it differs between people and responds to changes in diet. "Our bodies are like coral reefs," said Dr. Frederic Bushman of the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, senior author of the study, "inhabited by ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Explainable AI for ship navigation raises trust, decreases human error

Study reveals erasing inequality could prevent hundreds of adverse births annually in major UK city

No “uncanny valley” effect in science-telling AI avatars

New UNCG research shows southern shrews shrink in winter

Children exposed to brain-harming chemicals while sleeping

Emotions and levels of threat affect communities’ resilience during extreme events

New CONSORT reporting guidelines published today in five medical journals

Experts stress importance of vaccination amidst measles outbreaks

Enabling stroke victims to 'speak': $19 million toward brain implants to be built at U-M

Study captures sharp uptake in use of new weight loss and glucose-lowering medications

Van Andel Institute to recognize Dr. J. Timothy Greenamyre with 2025 Jay Van Andel Award for Outstanding Achievement in Parkinson’s Disease Research

One firearm injury was treated every 30 minutes in emergency departments in a study of 10 jurisdictions

The gut health benefits of sauerkraut

Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia researchers chart natural history of patients with SCN8A-related disorders

Archaeologists measured and compared the size of 50,000 ancient houses to learn about the history of inequality -- they found that it’s not inevitable

Peptide imitation is the sincerest form of plant flattery

Archaeologists discover historical link between inequality and sustainability

Researchers develop an LSD analogue with potential for treating schizophrenia

How does our brain regulate generosity?

New study reveals wealth inequality’s deep roots in human prehistory

New archaeological database reveals links between housing and inequality in ancient world

New, non-toxic synthesis method for “miracle material” MXene

Cutting-edge optical genome mapping technology shows promise for diagnosis, prognosis, and therapeutic options of multiple myeloma

Study looks at impact of COVID-19 pandemic on rates of congenital heart disease procedures among children

UH researcher unveils new model to evaluate impact of extreme events and natural hazards

Illegal poisonings imperil European raptors and could disrupt ecosystem health

UF professor develops AI tool to better assess Parkinson’s disease, other movement disorders

Computer science professor elected AAAS Fellow

Learning about social interaction by studying dancing

Immune cell 'messengers' could save crumbling bones - new hope for joint pain sufferers

[Press-News.org] Secure attachment to moms helps irritable babies interact with others