Dr. Michal Perlman

Professor, University of Toronto and Director, Dr. R.G.N. Laidlaw Research Centre, University of Toronto



416-978-0596


Ontario Institute for Studies in Education (OISE)

University of Toronto

252 Bloor Street West
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
M5S 1V6


Capturing the Temporal Sequence of Interaction in Young Siblings


Journal article


Michal Perlman, Mark Lyons-Amos, George Leckie, Fiona Steele, Jennifer Jenkins
Jeffrey M Haddad, PLOS ONE, vol. 10, Public Library of Science ({PLoS}), 2015 May, pp. e0126353


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APA   Click to copy
Perlman, M., Lyons-Amos, M., Leckie, G., Steele, F., & Jenkins, J. (2015). Capturing the Temporal Sequence of Interaction in Young Siblings. PLOS ONE, 10, e0126353. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0126353


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Perlman, Michal, Mark Lyons-Amos, George Leckie, Fiona Steele, and Jennifer Jenkins. “Capturing the Temporal Sequence of Interaction in Young Siblings.” Edited by Jeffrey M Haddad. PLOS ONE 10 (May 2015): e0126353.


MLA   Click to copy
Perlman, Michal, et al. “Capturing the Temporal Sequence of Interaction in Young Siblings.” PLOS ONE, edited by Jeffrey M Haddad, vol. 10, Public Library of Science ({PLoS}), May 2015, p. e0126353, doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0126353.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{perlman2015a,
  title = {Capturing the Temporal Sequence of Interaction in Young Siblings},
  year = {2015},
  month = may,
  journal = {PLOS ONE},
  pages = {e0126353},
  publisher = {Public Library of Science ({PLoS})},
  volume = {10},
  doi = {10.1371/journal.pone.0126353},
  author = {Perlman, Michal and Lyons-Amos, Mark and Leckie, George and Steele, Fiona and Jenkins, Jennifer},
  editor = {Haddad, Jeffrey M},
  month_numeric = {5}
}

Abstract

We explored whether young children exhibit subtypes of behavioral sequences during sibling interaction. Ten-minute, free-play observations of over 300 sibling dyads were coded for positivity, negativity and disengagement. The data were analyzed using growth mixture modeling (GMM). Younger (18-month-old) children’s temporal behavioral sequences showed a harmonious (53%) and a casual (47%) class. Older (approximately four-year-old) children’s behavior was more differentiated revealing a harmonious (25%), a deteriorating (31%), a recovery (22%) and a casual (22%) class. A more positive maternal affective climate was associated with more positive patterns. Siblings’ sequential behavioral patterns tended to be complementary rather than reciprocal in nature. The study illustrates a novel use of GMM and makes a theoretical contribution by showing that young children exhibit distinct types of temporal behavioral sequences that are related to parenting processes.



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