Publication | Open Access
Differentiated Brain Activity in Response to Faces of “Own” Versus “Unfamiliar” Babies in Primipara Mothers: An Electrophysiological Study
41
Citations
116
References
2013
Year
Brain DevelopmentDevelopmental Cognitive NeuroscienceParent Nervous SystemInfant PerceptionBrain ActivityPsychologySocial SciencesDevelopmental PsychologyEarly VisionCognitive DevelopmentBiological PsychologyCognitive ElectrophysiologyCognitive NeuroscienceEarly Life ExposureChild PsychologyCognitive ScienceOwn InfantBehavioral NeuroscienceElectrophysiological StudyBrain StructureEarly Childhood DevelopmentMaternal HealthFetal NeurodevelopmentInfant CognitionSensorimotor DevelopmentChild DevelopmentNeurosciencePrimipara MothersMedicine
Experiences with one's own infant attune the parent nervous system to infant stimuli. To explore the effects of motherhood on brain activity patterns, electroencephalogram (EEG) was recorded while primipara mothers of 3- and 6-month-olds viewed images of faces of their own child and an unfamiliar but appearance-matched child. Mothers of 3- and 6-month-olds showed equivalent early-wave (N/P1 "visual" and N170 "face-sensitive") responses to own and unfamiliar baby faces but differentiating late-wave (N/P600 "familiar/ novel") activity to own versus unfamiliar infant faces. Based on 3 months experience with their own infant's face, mothers' brain patterns give evidence of distinctive late-wave (recognition) sensitivity.
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