The relationship between sucking and grasping in the human newborn: A precursor of hand-mouth coordination?
- 1 November 1977
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Developmental Psychobiology
- Vol. 10 (6) , 489-498
- https://doi.org/10.1002/dev.420100602
Abstract
The relationship between grasping and sucking, a possible precursor of hand-mouth coordination, was examined in human newborns of varying gestational ages. Grasping was elicited by rapidly titling the infant backwards while he rested on a padded board and held a grasp bar. Infants were titled 4 times under each of 3 conditions: grasping, sucking, and grasping-while-sucking. The dependent variables were strength and duration of grasp and frequency and amplitude of sucks during the 15 sec following the tilt. The results indicated that grasping did not affect sucking but that sucking increased the strength and the duration of the grasp. Furthermore, either response system was more highly correlated with indices of maturity of the central nervous system when elicited in the presence rather than the absence of the other. We conclude that in human newborns sucking may be dominant over grasping but that both are part of an integrated system which may form the basis for the development of hand-mouth coordination.This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Interactions of Black Inner-City Mothers with Their Newborn InfantsChild Development, 1975
- Motor behaviors of neonatal rhesus monkeys: Measurement techniques and early developmentDevelopmental Psychobiology, 1973
- Instrumental control of the sucking response in human newbornsJournal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1972
- Association of Two Congenitally Organized Behavior Patterns in the Newborn: Hand-Mouth Coordination and LookingPerceptual and Motor Skills, 1972
- Clinical assessment of gestational age in the newborn infantThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1970
- Problems of Behavioral Studies in the Newborn InfantAdvances in the Study of Behavior, 1965
- Cerebral Function in Infancy and ChildhoodPublished by Springer Nature ,1963
- GRASPING AND SUCKINGJournal of Nervous & Mental Disease, 1940