2022
DOI: 10.1016/j.chb.2021.107051
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Digital distraction or accessible aid? Parental media use during feedings and parent-infant attachment, dysfunction, and relationship quality

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Cited by 13 publications
(15 citation statements)
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References 47 publications
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“…Per prima cosa i genitori riferiscono di utilizzare gli schermi per far fronte alle difficoltà relazionali, di alimentazione dei bambini, ma anche per rimanere produttivi anche durante i momenti di accudimento e poter restare connessi con altre persone. Inoltre dichiarano di usare le tecnologie per alleviare lo stress delle cure parentali e per ricavare del tempo per sestessi [14]. Quindi cercano di rendere meno pesante l'impegno (e la fatica) relazionale.…”
Section: Comportamenti E Motivazioni Dei Genitoriunclassified
“…Per prima cosa i genitori riferiscono di utilizzare gli schermi per far fronte alle difficoltà relazionali, di alimentazione dei bambini, ma anche per rimanere produttivi anche durante i momenti di accudimento e poter restare connessi con altre persone. Inoltre dichiarano di usare le tecnologie per alleviare lo stress delle cure parentali e per ricavare del tempo per sestessi [14]. Quindi cercano di rendere meno pesante l'impegno (e la fatica) relazionale.…”
Section: Comportamenti E Motivazioni Dei Genitoriunclassified
“…Thus, longitudinal research is essential to investigate the impact of technoference on later language outcomes. The few longitudinal studies that have measured technoference in children from birth to age 5 have focused on a wider range of devices than just smartphones as sources of technoference and nonlanguage outcomes (e.g., child behavior; McDaniel & Radesky, 2018; attachment; Coyne et al, 2022). One study found different results at the cross‐sectional level compared to the longitudinal data (Coyne et al, 2022), reinforcing the need for longitudinal work that captures more effectively the ongoing effects of technoference on language.…”
Section: Limitations and Next Stepsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The few longitudinal studies that have measured technoference in children from birth to age 5 have focused on a wider range of devices than just smartphones as sources of technoference and nonlanguage outcomes (e.g., child behavior; McDaniel & Radesky, 2018; attachment; Coyne et al, 2022). One study found different results at the cross‐sectional level compared to the longitudinal data (Coyne et al, 2022), reinforcing the need for longitudinal work that captures more effectively the ongoing effects of technoference on language. As we have proposed, examining longitudinal trajectories of technoference during parent‐child interactions can help us understand its effect on infants’ gaze following, parental responsiveness, and joint attention, and how these affect subsequent language development.…”
Section: Limitations and Next Stepsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…For parents, technology can serve as a distraction from stress and an escape from a busy, demanding world [16]. Parents use media for a variety of adaptive reasons such as staying connected to the world outside their home and to stay connected with loved ones during the exhausting early days of parenting a newborn [17][18][19]. Other parents report that it is an easy way to reward themselves or escape from stress or boredom within their parenting role [16,20].…”
Section: Moment-to-moment Observation Of Parentalmentioning
confidence: 99%