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About this Post
- Age range: 8 to 13 months
- Developmental pillar:
- Physical and Brain Development
- Social and Emotional Development
- Learning and Cognitive Development
- Communication and Language Development
- Physical and Brain Development: How children develop
- Social and Emotional Development: How children feel and connect
- Learning and Cognitive Development: How children think and learn
- Communication and Language Development: How children communicate
At around 7 to 8 months, most children begin to show fearfulness around unfamiliar people. This is called stranger anxiety, and it is a normal reaction that tends to increase over the next several months. Children may appear to tense up, cling to parents, or try to hide from a new person. Many researchers believe that stranger anxiety grows as children get better at remembering familiar faces and identifying unfamiliar faces. Researchers have found that when strangers approach more slowly or don't reach out to touch a baby too quickly, stranger anxiety can be reduced. Some children experience higher levels of stranger anxiety than others.
References
- Sroufe, L. A. (1977). Wariness of strangers and the study of infants. Child Development, 48, 1184

