Abstract
Interactions with caregivers play a crucial role in early development. While most of the world's children live in Majority World countries, research on caregiving predominantly uses measures developed in the Minority World (particularly North America and Europe), potentially biasing characterizations of parenting in understudied populations. This study describes the development of the "Demba Yaal Interaction Scale (DYIS)", a behavioral micro-coding scheme to assesses caregiver responsiveness in a rural, low-resource, collectivist caregiving community in The Gambia. We adopted a contextually sensitive approach by co-creating the scheme partnering Gambian researchers, familiar with the caregiving context, and UK researchers familiar with behavioral coding. The scheme was piloted on 5-min videorecorded mother-infant interactions, when infants were aged 12-months (N = 50, 48% female). There were substantial individual differences in maternal responsiveness levels. Modality-wise, responses were most likely to be non-verbal, compared to verbal or bimodal. Mothers with some formal education were significantly more responsive and more readily engaged in bimodal responsiveness. Negative associations between these interactive behaviors and maternal demographic and socioeconomic variables (age, number of children, household size) were present but did not remain significant after correction for multiple comparisons. Moreover, associations emerged between infant physical growth and infant behaviors, as well as between maternal responsiveness and infant communication, although these too, did not remain significant after correction for multiple comparison. Our work provides a potential framework for future research seeking to develop contextually tailored assessments of caregiving practices and highlights important demographic and health variables that warrant further examination in larger samples.