Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences.
J Neurosci. 2022 May 18;42(20):4164-4173. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2018-21.2022. Epub 2022 Apr 28.
The social worlds of young children primarily revolve around parents and caregivers, who play a key role in guiding children's social and cognitive development. However, a hallmark of adolescence is a shift in orientation toward nonfamilial social targets, an adaptive process that prepares adolescents for their independence. Little is known regarding neurobiological signatures underlying changes in adolescents' social orientation. Using functional brain imaging of human voice processing in children and adolescents (ages 7-16), we demonstrate distinct neural signatures for mother's voice and nonfamilial voices across child and adolescent development in reward and social valuation systems, instantiated in nucleus accumbens and ventromedial prefrontal cortex. While younger children showed greater activity in these brain systems for mother's voice compared with nonfamilial voices, older adolescents showed the opposite effect with increased activity for nonfamilial compared with mother's voice. Findings uncover a critical role for reward and social valuative brain systems in the pronounced changes in adolescents' orientation toward nonfamilial social targets. Our approach provides a template for examining developmental shifts in social reward and motivation in individuals with pronounced social impairments, including adolescents with autism. Children's social worlds undergo a transformation during adolescence. While socialization in young children revolves around parents and caregivers, adolescence is characterized by a shift in social orientation toward nonfamilial social partners. Here we show that this shift is reflected in neural activity measured from reward processing regions in response to brief vocal samples. When younger children hear their mother's voice, reward processing regions show greater activity compared with when they hear nonfamilial, unfamiliar voices. Strikingly, older adolescents show the opposite effect, with increased activity for nonfamilial compared with mother's voice. Findings identify the brain basis of adolescents' switch in social orientation toward nonfamilial social partners and provides a template for understanding neurodevelopment in clinical populations with social and communication difficulties.
儿童的社交世界主要围绕着父母和照顾者,他们在指导儿童的社交和认知发展方面起着关键作用。然而,青少年的一个特点是,他们的社交取向从家庭转向非家庭,这是一个为他们的独立做准备的适应过程。关于青少年社交取向变化的神经生物学特征,我们知之甚少。通过对儿童和青少年(7-16 岁)的人类语音处理进行功能脑成像,我们在奖励和社会价值系统中,在伏隔核和腹内侧前额叶皮层中,为母亲的声音和非家庭的声音在儿童和青少年发展过程中的不同神经特征提供了证据。虽然年幼的孩子在这些大脑系统中对母亲的声音比对非家庭的声音表现出更大的活动,但年龄较大的青少年则表现出相反的效果,即对非家庭的声音比母亲的声音表现出更大的活动。研究结果揭示了奖励和社会价值系统在青少年对非家庭社交目标的明显变化中的关键作用。我们的方法为研究个体在社交奖励和动机方面的发展变化提供了一个模板,包括自闭症青少年。儿童的社交世界在青春期发生了转变。虽然幼儿的社会化围绕着父母和照顾者,但青春期的特点是,他们的社交取向从家庭转向非家庭的社会伙伴。在这里,我们表明,这种转变反映在对奖励处理区域进行测量时,对短暂的声音样本的反应中。当年幼的孩子听到他们母亲的声音时,奖励处理区域的活动比听到非家庭的、不熟悉的声音时更大。引人注目的是,年龄较大的青少年则表现出相反的效果,对非家庭的声音比对母亲的声音表现出更大的活动。研究结果确定了青少年向非家庭社交伙伴的社交取向转变的大脑基础,并为理解具有社交和沟通困难的临床人群的神经发育提供了一个模板。