Strathearn Lane, Li Jian, Fonagy Peter, Montague P Read
Department of Neuroscience, Meyer Center for Developmental Pediatrics, Human Neuroimaging Laboratory, Clinical Care Center, Suite 1530, 6621 Fannin St, Houston TX 77030-2399, USA.
Pediatrics. 2008 Jul;122(1):40-51. doi: 10.1542/peds.2007-1566.
Our goal was to determine how a mother's brain responds to her own infant's facial expressions, comparing happy, neutral, and sad face affect.
In an event-related functional MRI study, 28 first-time mothers were shown novel face images of their own 5- to 10-month-old infant and a matched unknown infant. Sixty unique stimuli from 6 categories (own-happy, own-neutral, own-sad, unknown-happy, unknown-neutral, and unknown-sad) were presented randomly for 2 seconds each, with a variable 2- to 6-second interstimulus interval.
Key dopamine-associated reward-processing regions of the brain were activated when mothers viewed their own infant's face compared with an unknown infant's face. These included the ventral tegmental area/substantia nigra regions, the striatum, and frontal lobe regions involved in (1) emotion processing (medial prefrontal, anterior cingulate, and insula cortex), (2) cognition (dorsolateral prefrontal cortex), and (3) motor/behavioral outputs (primary motor area). Happy, but not neutral or sad own-infant faces, activated nigrostriatal brain regions interconnected by dopaminergic neurons, including the substantia nigra and dorsal putamen. A region-of-interest analysis revealed that activation in these regions was related to positive infant affect (happy > neutral > sad) for each own-unknown infant-face contrast.
When first-time mothers see their own infant's face, an extensive brain network seems to be activated, wherein affective and cognitive information may be integrated and directed toward motor/behavioral outputs. Dopaminergic reward-related brain regions are activated specifically in response to happy, but not sad, infant faces. Understanding how a mother responds uniquely to her own infant, when smiling or crying, may be the first step in understanding the neural basis of mother-infant attachment.
我们的目标是确定母亲的大脑如何对自己婴儿的面部表情做出反应,并比较开心、中性和悲伤表情的影响。
在一项事件相关功能磁共振成像研究中,向28位初为人母者展示其5至10个月大婴儿以及一名匹配的陌生婴儿的新面孔图像。来自6个类别(自己婴儿开心脸、自己婴儿中性脸、自己婴儿悲伤脸、陌生婴儿开心脸、陌生婴儿中性脸和陌生婴儿悲伤脸)的60种独特刺激随机呈现,每次持续2秒,刺激间隔为2至6秒不等。
与陌生婴儿的面孔相比,母亲观看自己婴儿的面孔时,大脑中与多巴胺相关的关键奖赏处理区域被激活。这些区域包括腹侧被盖区/黑质区域、纹状体以及涉及以下方面的额叶区域:(1)情绪处理(内侧前额叶、前扣带回和脑岛皮质),(2)认知(背外侧前额叶皮质),以及(3)运动/行为输出(初级运动区)。自己婴儿的开心脸而非中性脸或悲伤脸激活了由多巴胺能神经元相互连接的黑质纹状体脑区,包括黑质和背侧壳核。感兴趣区域分析显示,在每次自己婴儿脸与陌生婴儿脸的对比中,这些区域的激活与婴儿的积极情绪(开心>中性>悲伤)相关。
初为人母者看到自己婴儿的面孔时,一个广泛的脑网络似乎会被激活,在这个网络中,情感和认知信息可能会被整合并导向运动/行为输出。多巴胺能奖赏相关脑区会特别因婴儿的开心脸而非悲伤脸被激活。了解母亲在婴儿微笑或哭泣时如何独特地做出反应,可能是理解母婴依恋神经基础的第一步。