Faculty of Psychology, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria.
Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, Leipzig, Germany.
PLoS Biol. 2018 Dec 13;16(12):e3000055. doi: 10.1371/journal.pbio.3000055. eCollection 2018 Dec.
Infants' cognitive development and learning rely profoundly on their interactions with other people. In the first year, infants become increasingly sensitive to others' gaze and use it to focus their own attention on relevant visual input. However, infants are not passive observers in early social interactions, and these exchanges are characterized by high levels of contingency and reciprocity. Wass and colleagues offer first insights into the neurobehavioral dynamics of caregiver-infant interactions, demonstrating that caregivers' scalp-recorded theta band activity responds to their infant's changes in attention, and parental brain activation is associated with infants' sustenance of attention. This research opens up entirely new ways of exploring caregiver-infant interactions and to understand early social attention as a reciprocal and dynamic process.
婴儿的认知发展和学习深深依赖于他们与他人的互动。在第一年,婴儿对他人的注视变得越来越敏感,并利用它将自己的注意力集中在相关的视觉输入上。然而,婴儿在早期的社会互动中并不是被动的观察者,这些交流的特点是高度的偶然性和互惠性。Wass 及其同事首次深入了解了照顾者-婴儿互动的神经行为动态,他们发现照顾者头皮记录的θ波段活动对婴儿注意力的变化做出反应,并且父母的大脑激活与婴儿维持注意力有关。这项研究为探索照顾者-婴儿互动以及将早期社会注意力理解为一个互惠和动态的过程开辟了全新的途径。