Infant and Child Development | 2019

Developmental cascades of social inhibition and friendships in preterm and full‐term children

 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Friendships are crucial to children s socioemotional development and quality of life. Children born preterm (<37 weeks gestation) have an increased risk for social relationship difficulties, including fewer friends, but the mechanisms underlying the link between lower gestational age and fewer friendships are not clear. The prospective Bavarian Longitudinal Study investigated potential cascading effects on N = 1,181 children s friendships at 8 years. Path modelling indicated that higher gestational age predicted good early parent–infant relationship quality, good inhibitory control, and higher friendship scores. Good parent–infant relationship quality predicted good inhibitory control, which subsequently predicted low social inhibition at 6 years and higher friendship scores at 8 years. There is evidence of cascading effects from gestational age to early parent–infant relationships, to toddlers inhibitory control, and to social inhibition, which partially explain differences in children s friendships at 8 years of age.

Volume 28
Pages None
DOI 10.1002/icd.2165
Language English
Journal Infant and Child Development

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