Culture is Bound to Shape Motor Development

Tajik baby in gahvora and smiling at the camera.

Image above: Figure 1. Tajik baby in gahvora. Photo courtesy of Lara Karasik; photo by Pierre Thiriet, Scott Robinson. Learn more about Karasik’s Lab.

Aimed at integrating cutting-edge psychological science into the classroom, columns about teaching Current Directions in Psychological Science offer advice and how-to guidance about teaching a particular area of research or topic in psychological science that has been the focus of an article in the APS journal Current Directions in Psychological Science.


Karasik, L. B. (2025). Cultural cascades and infant resilience: Insights from Tajik gahvora cradling practices. Current Directions in Psychological Science, 34(2), 131–139. 

Imagine you’re expecting a new baby. What items must you have in your home?  We might choose diapers, clothes, a bassinet. In a home in Tajikistan (a country that shares borders with Afghanistan, China, Kyrgyzstan, and Uzbekistan), expectant families would select a gahvora (Figure 1). Few Tajik families own high chairs or infant carriers; all own gahvoras. 

A gahvora is a wooden cradle. A baby’s arms and legs are straightened and wrapped to the base with wide, soft, fabric panels (Karasik, 2025). Tajik babies don’t wear diapers. Instead, their bottoms are placed over a hole in the mattress. Fussy babies are soothed to sleep with the gahvora’s rockers, and mothers can lean in to breastfeed. Swaddled in their cradles, babies watch the extended family work and play around the family courtyard, spending up to 20 hours per day in their gahvoras, up through age 3 (Karasik et al., 2018).  

Illustration from Karasik’s study displaying infant containment in a gahvora compared to typical U.S. devices. Karasik, L. B. (2025). Cultural cascades and infant resilience: Insights from Tajik gahvora cradling practices. Current Directions in Psychological Science, 34(2), 131–139.

Upon hearing about gahvora cradling, students might respond with astonishment and curiosity. Convert these emotional reactions into teachable moments by building cultural awareness and introducing the concept of developmental cascades. 

Before you introduce gahvoras, show the different domains of development (Table 1). As students predict whether culture will influence each domain, they may assume that motor development is the least likely to be influenced by culture. After all, a baby’s body “just grows.” But motor development, unlike simple growth, reflects rich, socially responsive, culturally diverse environments. 

Developmental domainExampleRating: How likely is this type of development to be influenced by culture (1 to 10)
Language  Babbling
Turn-taking
Saying or signing first word 
Two-word sentences 
 
Moral  Egocentric rules of morality 
Black-and-white “rules” for behavior 
Abstract moral principles  
 
Social  Infant attachment
Independent action  
First friendships  
 
Motor  Sitting alone 
Standing alone
Walking
Running 
 
Cognitive  Object permanence 
Understanding of basic physics (what balls do, what water does)  
 
Table 1. Introduce students to developmental domains and get their initial ideas about how development is shaped by culture.  
Student Activities

In sum, research on the Tajik use of gahvoras in childrearing reminds us that child development is shaped by cultural context, both short-term and long-term.

Additional References

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