Head Control (Pull-to-Sit, No Head Lag)
Infant supports their own head when pulled to a sitting position from supine — the head follows the trunk without lagging behind. Universally tracked motor milestone (kubi-ga-suwaru / 首がすわる in Japanese, 'head control' in English clinical practice). Foundational for sitting, reaching, and visual exploration. JP MHLW Heisei-22 survey reports 90%+ of infants achieve this by 4-5 months. NOTE: this canonical fills a gap in the previously-merged English ontology, which lacked a clean entry for this classic milestone.
What the research says
Referenced across 1 developmental framework: jp_mhlw
Full quotes, source languages, and document links coming soon as we finish the source-evidence indexing pass.
Prerequisites
Foundational skill — no prerequisites indexed.
What mastery looks like
Does not yet exhibit head control (pull-to-sit, no head lag).
Beginning to show head control (pull-to-sit, no head lag) with support or in limited contexts.
Demonstrates head control (pull-to-sit, no head lag) reliably in familiar contexts.
Exhibits head control (pull-to-sit, no head lag) consistently across contexts.
Head Control (Pull-to-Sit, No Head Lag) is automatic and integrated into routine behavior.
Activities for this (12)
Tickle the Tummy Toy
Tummy Time Treasure Hunt
A playful tummy time activity that encourages your child to push up on elbows and forearms while reaching for colorful objects.
Look Up, Little Explorer!
A gentle, playful activity to help your child build neck strength and steady head control while being held upright.
Pull-to-Sit Practice
Parent helps baby practice sitting up by offering a stick or hands to grab and gently pulling to seated position. The agent coaches the parent to observe sitting effort, head control during the pull, and supported sitting stability.
Baby sit-up
Build muscles and prepare baby for sitting. Sitting is an important milestone in a baby s motor development. Strengthening the muscles necessary to maintain a seated position is a crucial step toward independence and the ability to explore the
The position
This helps teach your baby to reach the sitting position. Once your baby has develop head control, place them around pillows or cushions so that they are supported and remain in a sitting position. Now, gently push your baby towards the cushion so that they
Head Lift and Turn Practice
Parent guides baby through tummy time and supine head turning using a rattle or toy. The agent coaches the parent to observe early head control development, neck muscle strength, and visual tracking responses — building foundational gross motor skills for head stability.
Upright Head Turning Play
Parent holds baby upright with head support and uses bright toys to encourage head turning in both directions. The agent coaches the parent to observe head control, neck strength, and visual tracking while providing gentle support — building foundational neck muscles and head stability.
Follow the ghost
This helps Stimulate your baby's ability to fixate his sight on moving objects. During tummy time, enhance your baby s visual coordination by holding their favorite blanket, toy, or book in front of them. Capture their attention and then move the object in various directions to o
Reaching for Toys
Parent places brightly colored toys just out of baby's reach while baby is on their tummy, encouraging reaching and grasping. The agent coaches the parent to observe head control, hand-eye coordination, and grasp reflex development.
Tummy Soothing Massage
Parent performs a gentle tummy massage to help relieve baby's colic or stomach discomfort. The agent coaches the parent to observe baby's relaxation responses, social connection during caregiving, and physical comfort cues — building trust and providing relief through nurturing touch.
Soothing Tummy Massage
Parent gently massages baby's tummy using downward strokes and circular motions to help relieve stomach discomfort. The agent coaches the parent to observe baby's relaxation response, social connection during caregiving, and body awareness as baby experiences soothing touch.
Formal assessments
No matching assessment items indexed yet.