Swain James E
Yale Child Study Center, Program for Risk, Resilience and Recovery, New Haven, Connecticut.
Psychiatry (Edgmont). 2008 Aug;5(8):28-36.
Interacting parenting thoughts and behaviors critically shape human infants' current and future behavior. Indeed, the parent-infant relationship provides infants with their first social environment, forming templates for what they can expect from others and how best to interact with them. This paper focuses on the functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) experiments relevant to the study of the brain-basis of parenting. First there is a brief introduction to techniques and a selective review of functional neuroimaging studies that examine fMRI responses to infant stimuli: baby sounds or visuals. Next, there is a sample single-subject set of brain imaging data of brain response to own-baby-cry. Finally, there is a proposed model of how infant stimuli activate parent brain circuits, including sensory analysis brain regions, as well as corticolimbic circuits that regulate motivation, reward, and learning about their infants, and ultimately organize parenting impulses, thoughts, and emotions into coordinated behaviors. It is argued that an integrated understanding of the brain basis of parenting has profound implications for understanding long-term parent and infant mental health risk and resilience.
相互作用的育儿思想和行为对人类婴儿当前及未来的行为有着至关重要的塑造作用。事实上,亲子关系为婴儿提供了他们的首个社会环境,形成了他们对他人期望以及与他人最佳互动方式的模板。本文聚焦于与育儿的脑基础研究相关的功能磁共振成像(fMRI)实验。首先简要介绍技术,并对功能性神经影像学研究进行选择性综述,这些研究考察了fMRI对婴儿刺激(婴儿声音或视觉图像)的反应。接下来,展示一组对自己宝宝哭声的大脑反应的单受试者脑成像数据样本。最后,提出一个关于婴儿刺激如何激活父母脑回路的模型,包括感觉分析脑区,以及调节动机、奖励和对婴儿认知的皮质边缘回路,并最终将育儿冲动、思想和情感组织成协调一致的行为。有人认为,对育儿的脑基础进行综合理解对于理解长期的父母和婴儿心理健康风险及恢复力具有深远意义。