Publication
Assessing mother-infant bonding: reliability of the recorded interaction task
Publisher:
Informa UK Limited
Date:
12-10-2022
DOI:
10.1080/02646838.2022.2134848
Abstract: This study examined the intra- and inter-rater reliability of the Recorded Interaction Task (RIT) a novel tool to assess mother-infant bonding via observational methods. Mother-infant bonding describes the reciprocal early emotional connection between mother and infant. Whilst various tools exist to assess mother-infant bonding, many incorrectly confuse this construct with mother-infant attachment. Further, available tools are limited to those that employ self-report methods, thus may reflect perceived behaviour, rather than actual behaviour. The RIT is a novel tool for observational assessment of mother-infant bonding. A standard interaction between mother and infant is recorded, and later assessed against specified bonding-related behaviours. Before its use in research, reliability testing must be undertaken to ensure the RIT may be used consistently. The RIT was administered to 15 mother-infant dyads. Participant recordings were assessed by three trained raters at two time points, using the RIT observation scoring sheet. Intra-rater reliability was determined by comparing scores at each time point for each rater. Inter-rater reliability was determined by assessing reliability of scores at the first time point. Strong intra-rater reliability (ICC >0.86) and fair inter-rater reliability (ICC = 0.55) were observed. The current findings support the RIT's potential to reliably assess mother-infant bonding.