1. Is Neighborhood Nature an Ecological Precursor of Parenting Practices, Infant-Parent Bonding, and Infant Socioemotional Function?
- Author
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Mygind, Lærke, Greenwood, Christopher, Letcher, Primrose, Mavoa, Suzanne, Lycett, Kate, Wang, Yichao, Flensborg-Madsen, Trine, Bentsen, Peter, Macdonald, Jacqui A., Thomson, Kimberly, Hutchinson, Delyse, Olsson, Craig A., and Enticott, Peter G.
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INFANTS , *PARENTING , *PARENT-infant relationships , *CHILD development , *NEIGHBORHOODS - Abstract
Nurturing relationships are crucial for adaptive child development. The objectives of the study were to investigate whether nature availability was associated with early nurturing parenting practices, mother-infant bonding, and infant socioemotional function. Data were from the Australian Temperament Project (n = 809 infants to 515 parents residing in Victoria, Australia) and were linked cross-sectionally to residential greenness (i.e., Normalized Difference in Vegetation Index). There were no observable associations between residential greenness within a 1,600 m network radius and parenting practices, mother-infant bonding, or infant socioemotional function. The findings were largely corroborated by sensitivity analyses (i.e., NDVI within 100, 250, 500, and 1,000 m and distance to park). Shorter distances to a park were associated with less hostile parenting. More residential greenness (1,000 and 1,600 m) was associated with stronger father-infant bonding and more hostile parenting amongst the most stressed parents in exploratory analyses. Residential greenness might be a socioecological precursor for father-infant bonding. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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