4.2 Article

ACQUISITION OF SOCIAL REFERENCING VIA DISCRIMINATION TRAINING IN INFANTS

Journal

JOURNAL OF APPLIED BEHAVIOR ANALYSIS
Volume 45, Issue 1, Pages 23-36

Publisher

JOURNAL APPL BEHAV ANAL
DOI: 10.1901/jaba.2012.45-23

Keywords

discrimination training; facial expression; infants; joint attention; mother-infant preverbal communication; social referencing

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This experiment investigated social referencing as a form of discriminative learning in which maternal facial expressions signaled the consequences of the infant's behavior in an ambiguous context. Eleven 4- and 5-month-old infants and their mothers participated in a discrimination-training procedure using an ABAB design. Different consequences followed infants' reaching toward an unfamiliar object depending on the particular maternal facial expression. During the training phases, a joyful facial expression signaled positive reinforcement for the infant reaching for an ambiguous object, whereas a fearful expression signaled aversive stimulation for the same response. Baseline and extinction conditions were implemented as controls. Mothers' expressions acquired control over infants' approach behavior for all participants. All participants ceased to show discriminated responding during the extinction phase. The results suggest that 4- and 5-month-old infants can learn social referencing via discrimination training.

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