1. Mind-mindedness versus mentalistic interpretations of behavior: Is mind-mindedness a relational construct?
- Author
-
Larkin F, Schacht R, Oostenbroek J, Hayward E, Fernyhough C, Muñoz Centifanti LC, and Meins E
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Infant, Parents, Mother-Child Relations, Mothers
- Abstract
Mind-mindedness is a measure of the tendency to represent significant others in internal state terms and is central to supportive parent-infant relationships. The two studies reported here explored whether mind-mindedness generalizes to representations of unknown individuals, using a novel task that assessed individual differences in adults' tendency to interpret others' behavior with reference to their internal states: the Unknown Mother-Infant Interaction Task (UMIIT). We compared UMIIT performance with measures of mind-mindedness from (a) adults' descriptions of close friends and partners (Study 1, N = 96) and (b) mothers' appropriate versus nonattuned comments on their infants' internal states (Study 2, N = 56). In line with the proposal that mind-mindedness is a relational construct, UMIIT performance was unrelated to mind-mindedness in both studies., (© 2020 Michigan Association for Infant Mental Health.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF