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TEMPERAMENTAL ADAPTABILITY,PERSISTENCE, AND REGULARITY: PARENTAL RATINGS OF NORWEGIAN INFANTS AGED 6 TO 12 MONTHS,WITH SOME IMPLICATIONS FOR PREVENTIVE PRACTICE
Authors:Kåre S. Olafsen  Stein Erik Ulvund  Anne Mari Torgersen  Tore Wentzel‐Larsen  Lars Smith  Vibeke Moe
Affiliation:1. Centre for Child and Adolescent Mental Health, Eastern and Southern Norway;2. University of Oslo and University of Troms?–The Arctic University;3. University of Oslo;4. Centre for Child and Adolescent Mental Health, Eastern and Southern Norway and Norwegian Centre for Violence and Traumatic Stress Studies;5. University of Oslo and National Network for Infant Mental Health in NorwayCentre for Child and Adolescent Mental Health, Eastern and Southern Norway
Abstract:There is a need for standardized measures of infant temperament to strengthen current practices in prevention and early intervention. The present study provides Norwegian data on the Cameron‐Rice Infant Temperament Questionnaire (CRITQ; J.R. Cameron & D.C. Rice, 1986a), which comprises 46 items and is used within a U.S. health maintenance organization. The CRITQ was filled out by mothers and fathers at 6 and again at 12 months as part of a longitudinal study of mental health during the first years of life (the “Little in Norway” study, N = 1,041 families enrolled; V. Moe & L. Smith, 2010). Results showed that internal consistencies were comparable with U.S. data. The temperament dimensions of persistence, adaptability, and regularity had acceptable or close‐to‐acceptable reliabilities in the U.S. study as well as in this study, and also were unifactorial in confirmatory factor analysis. These dimensions are the focus in this article. Findings concerning parents’ differential ratings of their infants on the three dimensions are reported, as is the stability of parents’ ratings of temperament from 6 to 12 months. In addition, results on the relation between temperament and parenting stress are presented. The study suggests that temperamental adaptability, persistence, and regularity may be relevant when assessing infant behavior, and may be applied in systematic prevention trials for families with infants. The inclusion of concepts related to individual differences in response tendencies and regulatory efforts may broaden the understanding of parent—infant transactions, and thus enrich prevention and sensitizing interventions with the aim of assisting infants’ development.
Keywords:temperament and prevention  adaptability  persistence  regularity  infants  temperamento y prevenció  n  adaptabilidad  persistencia  regularidad  infantes  tempé  rament and pré  vention  adaptabilité    persistance    gularité        s  Temperament und Prä  vention  Anpassungsfä  higkeit  Persistenz  Regelmä  ß  igkeit    uglinge                                                                                          ا  ل  م  ز  ا  ج   و  ا  ل  و  ق  ا  ي  ة   ،   ا  ل  ت  ك  ي  ف   ،   ا  ل  ث  ب  ا  ت   ،   ا  ل  ا  ن  ت  ظ  ا  م   ،   ا  ل  ر  ض  ع  
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