Clinical Child & Family Studies, Faculty of Behavioral and Movement Sciences, Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
Leiden Institute for Brain and Cognition, Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, the Netherlands.
Dev Psychobiol. 2021 Jul;63(5):1358-1369. doi: 10.1002/dev.22055. Epub 2020 Nov 4.
Infant protection is an important but largely neglected aspect of parental care. Available theory and research suggest that endocrine levels and neural responses might be biological correlates of protective behavior. However, no research to date examined associations between these neurobiological and behavioral aspects. This study, preregistered on https://osf.io/2acxd, explored the psychobiology of paternal protection in 77 new fathers by combining neural responses to infant-threatening situations, self-reported protective behavior, behavioral observations in a newly developed experimental set-up (Auditory Startling Task), and measurements of testosterone and vasopressin. fMRI analyses validated the role of several brain networks in the processing of infant-threatening situations and indicated replicable findings with the infant-threat paradigm. We found little overlap between observed and reported protective behavior. Robust associations between endocrine levels, neural responses, and paternal protective behavior were absent.
婴儿保护是父母照顾中一个重要但在很大程度上被忽视的方面。现有理论和研究表明,内分泌水平和神经反应可能是保护行为的生物学相关因素。然而,迄今为止,没有研究检查这些神经生物学和行为方面之间的关联。这项研究在 https://osf.io/2acxd 上进行了预先注册,通过将对婴儿威胁情况的神经反应、自我报告的保护行为、新开发的实验设置中的行为观察(听觉惊跳任务)以及睾酮和加压素的测量相结合,探讨了 77 位新父亲的父爱保护的心理生物学。fMRI 分析验证了几个大脑网络在处理婴儿威胁情况中的作用,并指出了婴儿威胁范式的可复制发现。我们发现观察到的和报告的保护行为之间几乎没有重叠。内分泌水平、神经反应和父爱保护行为之间不存在强有力的关联。