1991
DOI: 10.1037/0012-1649.27.3.432
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Infant cardiac activity: Developmental changes and relations with attachment.

Abstract: In this study the stability over the first 13 months of life of measures of infant cardiac activity (heart period and heart-period variability), their relations with each other, and their relations with a continuous-variable index of infant-mother attachment were investigated. The indexes of cardiac activity changed in an orderly way with development (increasing heart-rate variability, decreasing heart rate). There were moderate to high intercorrelations among the cardiac measures, particularly those indexing … Show more

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Cited by 119 publications
(97 citation statements)
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References 31 publications
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“…Porter, Bryan, and Hsu (1995) reported moderate stability of RSA across the first 6 months of life. Izard, Porges, Simons, Haynes, and Cohen (1991) reported stability from 3 and 4.5 months of age to 6, 9, and 13 months of age. Fracasso, Porges, Lamb, and Rosenberg (1994) also reported stability over the first year of life with correlations between consecutive assessments at 5, 7, 10, and 13 months ranging from r ¼ .50 to r ¼ .55.…”
Section: Stability Of Measures Of Cardiac Vagal Tone and Cortisolmentioning
confidence: 90%
“…Porter, Bryan, and Hsu (1995) reported moderate stability of RSA across the first 6 months of life. Izard, Porges, Simons, Haynes, and Cohen (1991) reported stability from 3 and 4.5 months of age to 6, 9, and 13 months of age. Fracasso, Porges, Lamb, and Rosenberg (1994) also reported stability over the first year of life with correlations between consecutive assessments at 5, 7, 10, and 13 months ranging from r ¼ .50 to r ¼ .55.…”
Section: Stability Of Measures Of Cardiac Vagal Tone and Cortisolmentioning
confidence: 90%
“…For example, Bornstein and Suess (2000) found marginal stability (r ¼ .30) between 2 months and 5 years of age, and Fracasso, Porges, Lamb, and Rosenberg (1994) reported stability levels between r ¼ .50 and r ¼ .60 during Months 7, 10, and 13 of the infants' lives (see also Izard et al, 1991). Note that some investigations did not support the stability of baseline RSA in the first year of life (Porter, Bryan, & Hsu, 1995;Stifter, Fox, & Porges, 1989).…”
mentioning
confidence: 85%
“…Thus this data may not be appropriate for theorizing about the psychology of vagal tone in adults. Specifically, the vagus nerve controls the heart significantly less in infancy and in children than afterwards (e.g., Porges, Doussard-Roosevelt, Portales, & Suess, 1994;Izard, Porges, Simons, Haynes, & Cohen, 1991). As a consequence, it makes vagal tone in children and adults difficult to compare.…”
Section: Self-esteem and Vagal Tone 22mentioning
confidence: 99%