Department of Bioengineering, University of Pennsylvania.
Institute of Child Development, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities.
Dev Psychol. 2024 Oct;60(10):1827-1841. doi: 10.1037/dev0001787. Epub 2024 Aug 15.
Human interpersonal capacities emerge from coordinated neural, biological, and behavioral activity unfolding within and between people. However, developmental research to date has allocated comparatively little focus to the dynamic processes of social interactions emerge across these levels of analysis. Second-person neuroscience and dynamic systems approach together to offer an integrative framework for addressing these questions. This study quantified respiratory sinus arrhythmia and social behavior (∼360 observations per system) from 44 mothers and typically developing 9-month-old infants during a novel modified "still-face" (text message perturbation) task. Stochastic autoregression models indicate that the infant parasympathetic nervous system is coupled within and between people and is sensitive to social context. Intraindividual, we found positive coupling between infants' parasympathetic nervous system activity and their social behavior in the subsequent second, but only during the moments and periods of active caregiver engagement. Between people, we found a bidirectional coregulatory feedback loop: Mothers' parasympathetic activity predicted that of their infant in the subsequent second, a form of synchrony that decreased during the text message perturbation and did not fully recover. Conversely, infant parasympathetic activity predicted that of their mother at the subsequent second, a form of synchrony that was invariant over social context. Findings reveal unidirectional parasympathetic coupling within infants and a complementary allostatic feedback loop between mother and infant parasympathetic systems. They offer novel evidence of a dynamic, socially embedded parasympathetic system at previously undocumented timescales, contributing to both basic science and potential clinical targets to better support adaptive, multisystem social development. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).
人际能力源于人与人之间协调的神经、生物和行为活动。然而,迄今为止的发展研究相对较少关注社会互动在这些分析层面上出现的动态过程。第二人称神经科学和动态系统方法一起为解决这些问题提供了一个综合框架。本研究使用新的改良“静止面孔”(短信干扰)任务,对 44 位母亲和发育正常的 9 个月大婴儿进行了呼吸窦性心律失常和社会行为(每个系统约 360 个观察)的量化。随机自回归模型表明,婴儿副交感神经系统在人与人之间是相互联系的,并且对社会环境敏感。在个体内,我们发现婴儿副交感神经系统活动与其随后第二个社会行为之间存在正相关,但仅在主动照顾者参与的时刻和期间。在人与人之间,我们发现了一种双向的共同调节反馈循环:母亲的副交感神经活动预测了她的婴儿在随后第二个中的活动,这种同步形式在短信干扰期间下降,并没有完全恢复。相反,婴儿的副交感神经活动预测了她的母亲在随后第二个中的活动,这种同步形式在社会环境中是不变的。研究结果揭示了婴儿内部单向的副交感神经耦合,以及母亲和婴儿副交感神经系统之间互补的适应反馈循环。它们提供了动态、社会嵌入的副交感神经系统在以前未记录的时间尺度上的新证据,为更好地支持适应性、多系统社会发展提供了基础科学和潜在的临床目标。(PsycInfo 数据库记录(c)2024 APA,保留所有权利)。