S Gazzotti
University of Milano-Bicocca
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Featured researches published by S Gazzotti.
Infant Behavior & Development | 2011
Cristina Riva Crugnola; Renata Tambelli; M Spinelli; S Gazzotti; C Caprin; A Albizzati
With the aim of studying the relationship between methods of emotion regulation and quality of attachment we examined 39 infants with different patterns of attachment, of whom 20 were classified as secure (B), 12 as avoidant (A) and 7 as resistant (C), assessing the regulatory strategies adopted by them during the Strange Situation at 13 months. Secure infants used strategies of positive social engagement more than insecure avoidant infants, while resistant infants displayed greater negative social engagement and less object orientation than the other two groups. Avoidant infants adopted positive and negative hetero-regulatory strategies less than the other groups, also differing from resistant infants in their greater use of object regulatory strategies. There were no significant differences as regards self-comforting regulation. Thus, the findings showed how the most significant differences to emerge between the groups concerned hetero-regulatory strategies, developed by the infant in interaction with attachment figures, and regulatory strategies oriented towards objects. Further analysis showed how the use by part of each attachment group of the emotion regulation strategies varies, differentiating the episodes of the SSP according to their level of stress.
Infant Behavior & Development | 2014
Cristina Riva Crugnola; E Ierardi; S Gazzotti; A Albizzati
Early motherhood is considered a risk factor for an adequate relationship between mother and infant and for the subsequent development of the infant. The principal aim of the study is to analyze micro-analytically the effect of motherhood in adolescence on the quality of mother-infant interaction and emotion regulation at three months, considering at the same time the effect of maternal attachment on these variables. Participants were 30 adolescent mother-infant dyads compared to 30 adult mother-infant dyads. At infant 3 months, mother-infant interaction was video-recorded and coded with a modified version of the Infant Caregiver Engagement Phases and the Adult Attachment Interview was administered to the mother. Analysis showed that adolescent mothers (vs. adult mothers) spent more time in negative engagement and their infants spent less time in positive engagement and more time in negative engagement. Adolescent mothers are also less involved in play with their infants than adult mothers. Adolescent mother-infant dyads (vs. adult mother-infant dyads) showed a greater duration of negative matches and spent less time in positive matches. Insecure adolescent mother-infant dyads (vs. insecure adult mother-infant dyads) demonstrated less involvement in play with objects and spent less time in positive matches. To sum up adolescent mother-infant dyads adopt styles of emotion regulation and interaction with objects which are less adequate than those of dyads with adult mothers. Insecure maternal attachment in dyads with adolescent mothers (vs. adult mother infant dyads) is more influential as risk factor.
Attachment & Human Development | 2013
Cristina Riva Crugnola; S Gazzotti; M Spinelli; E Ierardi; C Caprin; A Albizzati
We examined the association between the quality of maternal representations of attachment evaluated by the Adult Attachment Interview (AAI) and mother styles of regulating attention and emotion during free play with objects in 41 mother dyads when infants were nine months old. The secure mother dyads showed a greater duration of engagement matches, with more positive matches, and a greater capacity to move from non-matched to matched states. Secure mother dyads demonstrated greater involvement in play with objects than insecure mother dyads. Insecure mother dyads showed a greater duration of mismatches and spent more time in negative matches. Correlations between maternal AAI scores and the variables studied also showed that the maternal Passivity and Unresolved scales were associated with less adequate dyadic attention and emotion regulation, while the maternal Coherence scale was associated with more adequate dyadic attention and emotion regulation.
International Attachment Conference, August 31- September 1 | 2013
C Riva Crugnola; S Gazzotti; E Ierardi; A Albizzati
Tradition | 2012
C Riva Crugnola; S Gazzotti; E Ierardi; M Moioli; A Albizzati
World Congress of the World Association for Infant Mental Health | 2010
C Riva Crugnola; S Gazzotti; M Spinelli; A Albizzati
Archive | 2009
C Riva Crugnola; A Albizzati; C Caprin; S Gazzotti; M Spinelli
Psicologia clinica dello sviluppo | 2018
E Ierardi; S Gazzotti; A Albizzati; C Riva Crugnola
International Attachment Conference | 2015
C Riva Crugnola; E Ierardi; S Gazzotti; A Albizzati; George Downing
Tradition | 2014
C Riva Crugnola; E Ierardi; S Gazzotti; A Albizzati; George Downing