Publications by authors named "James E Swain"

Article Synopsis
  • Childhood poverty negatively impacts cognitive skills, including language abilities, in adults who experienced it during their youth.* -
  • A study involving 51 adults previously identified as having a childhood poverty background showed they had lower language performance (LP) compared to their middle-income peers.* -
  • fMRI results indicated that adults from lower-income backgrounds had altered brain activity patterns related to language processing, suggesting lasting effects of childhood poverty on neural networks for language.*
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  • Theoretical perspectives in the affective sciences have increased in variety rather than converging due to differing beliefs about the nature and function of human emotions.
  • A teleological principle is proposed to create a unified approach by viewing human affective phenomena as algorithms that adapt to comfort or monitor these adaptations.
  • This framework aims to organize existing theories and inspire new research in the field, leading to a more integrated understanding of human affectivity through the concept of the Human Affectome.
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Opioid-induced deficits in maternal behaviors are well-characterized in rodent models. Amid the current epidemic of opioid use disorder (OUD), prevalence among pregnant women has risen sharply. Yet, the roles of buprenorphine replacement treatment for OUD (BT/OUD) in the brain functions of postpartum mothers are unclear.

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  • The article argues that rising community conflicts hinder compassion, especially when both sides view each other as "good vs. evil", questioning the relevance of compassion in such scenarios.
  • Compassion can be meaningful in conflicts perceived in a non-zero-sum way, as demonstrated by the prisoner's dilemma, encouraging win-win outcomes rather than a zero-sum "tug-of-war" mindset.
  • The piece suggests that embracing intuitive compassion, influenced by rPD, dyadic active inference, and Mahayana Buddhism, can effectively resolve conflicts by challenging invalid beliefs and fostering a broader perspective.
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  • Mothers worry about how their firstborn children will accept a new baby sibling.
  • A study used an infant doll simulator to observe children's reactions to mothers interacting with the doll before the real baby was born.
  • Results showed no clear link between children's behaviors with the doll and their actual behaviors with the new sibling after birth.
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  • Intersubjectivity is the mutual awareness between individuals, essential for personal growth and well-being throughout life, especially in parent-child interactions.
  • The authors present a dyadic active inference model showing that stress negatively affects intersubjectivity, which can result from issues like misinterpretation of intentions and neglect of one's impact on others.
  • A review of 35 parenting interventions revealed that those targeting the identified relational issues can effectively reduce parenting stress, supporting their proposed model and emphasizing the importance of relational health in effective parenting strategies.
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Benevolent intersubjectivity developed in parent-infant interactions and compassion toward friend and foe alike are non-violent interventions to group behavior in conflict. Based on a dyadic active inference framework rooted in specific parental brain mechanisms, we suggest that interventions promoting compassion and intersubjectivity can reduce stress, and that compassionate mediation may resolve conflicts.

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Article Synopsis
  • The prevalence of opioid use disorder (OUD) among pregnant women has increased, prompting the use of buprenorphine treatment (BT) to manage cravings and withdrawal during peripartum care.
  • Research shows that OUD can alter maternal bonding and behaviors due to the impact of opioids on specific brain regions responsible for maternal responsiveness, particularly the ventral pallidum (VP).
  • A pilot fMRI study involving 22 mothers, including those on BT and a control group, found reduced neural responses in regions like the supplementary motor area (SMA) when mothers viewed their child's facial expressions, suggesting potential risks in maternal sensitivity and the need for interventions to improve parenting behaviors.
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At least one in seven pregnant or recently postpartum women will experience a mental illness such as an anxiety disorder, depressive disorder, or substance use disorder. These mental illnesses have detrimental effects on the health of the mother, child, and family, but little is known about the hypothalamic and other neural correlates of maternal mental health concerns. The transition to parenthood alone is a time of remarkable neural plasticity, so it is perhaps not surprising that current research is showing that maternal mental illness has unique neural profiles.

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Social feelings have conceptual and empirical connections with affect and emotion. In this review, we discuss how they relate to cognition, emotion, behavior and well-being. We examine the functional neuroanatomy and neurobiology of social feelings and their role in adaptive social functioning.

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As interpersonal, racial, social, and international conflicts intensify in the world, it is important to safeguard the mental health of individuals affected by them. According to a Buddhist notion "if you want others to be happy, practice compassion; if you want to be happy, practice compassion," compassion practice is an intervention to cultivate conflict-proof well-being. Here, compassion practice refers to a form of concentrated meditation wherein a practitioner attunes to friend, enemy, and someone in between, thinking, "I'm going to help them (equally).

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Childhood socioeconomic status (SES) has been associated with brain cortex surface area in children. However, the extent to which childhood SES is prospectively associated with brain morphometry in adulthood is unclear. We tested whether childhood SES (income-to-needs ratio averaged across ages 9, 13, and 17) is prospectively associated with cortical surface morphometry in adulthood.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Stress resilience in parenting relies on a parent's ability to understand their own and their child's emotions, which is linked to the concept of intersubjectivity and emotional mirroring, but high stress can impair this understanding.
  • - The study explored the efficacy of a parenting intervention called Mom Power (MP) through a Child Face Mirroring Task (CFMT) using functional MRI to analyze neural responses in mothers before and after the intervention.
  • - Results showed that MP significantly reduced parenting stress and altered brain activity in specific areas, highlighting changes in how mothers empathize and respond to their own child's emotions compared to those of others.
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The association between childhood socioeconomic status (SES) and brain development is an emerging area of research. The primary focus to date has been on SES and variations in gray matter structure with much less known about the relation between childhood SES and white matter structure. Using a longitudinal study of SES, with measures of income-to-needs ratio (INR) at age 9, 13, 17, and 24, we examined the prospective relationship between childhood SES (age 9 INR) and white matter organization in adulthood using diffusion tensor imaging.

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This study explored the impact of infant temperament and maternal stress on the development of the infant medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) among sixteen 6-8-month-old infants. Functional Near Infrared Spectroscopy (fNIRS) was used to measure activation of the infant mPFC in response to angry, happy, and sad faces. Infant temperament and dimensions of maternal stress were measured with the Infant Behavior Questionnaire and the Parenting Stress Index Respectively.

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Between 1999 and 2014, the prevalence of opioid use disorder (OUD) among pregnant women quadrupled in the USA. The standard treatment for peripartum women with OUD is buprenorphine. However, the maternal behavior neurocircuit that regulates maternal behavior and mother-infant bonding has not been previously studied for human mothers receiving buprenorphine treatment for OUD (BT).

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The epidemic of opioid use disorder (OUD) directly affects millions of women of child-bearing age. Unfortunately, parenting behaviors - among the most important processes for human survival - are vulnerable to the effects of OUD. The standard of care for pregnant women with OUD is opioid maintenance therapy (OMT), of which the primary objective is to mitigate addiction-related stress.

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Neuroimaging research has suggested that activity in the amygdala, center of the socioemotional network, and functional connectivity between the amygdala and cortical regions are associated with caregiving behaviors in postpartum mothers. Anxiety is common in the early postpartum period, with severity ranging from healthy maternal preoccupation to clinical disorder. However, little is known about the influence of anxiety on the neural correlates of early caregiving.

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The "art form" of parent-infant bonding critically involves baby conveying negative emotions - literally compelling parents to respond and provide care. Current research on the brain basis of parenting is combining brain imaging with social, cognitive, and behavioral analyses to understand how parental brain circuits regulate thoughts and behavior in mental health, risk, and resilience. Understanding the parental brain may contribute to solving the long-standing paradox of self-sought hedonic exposure to negative emotions in art reception.

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Insensitive parental thoughts and affect, similar to contempt, may be mapped onto a network of basic emotions moderated by attitudinal representations of social-relational value. Brain mechanisms that reflect emotional valence of baby signals among parents vary according to individual differences and show plasticity over time. Furthermore, mental health problems and treatments for parents may affect these brain systems toward or away from contempt, respectively.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The report examines how new mothers across 11 countries respond behaviorally and neurobiologically to their own infants’ cries, finding that they primarily pick up and talk to their distressed infants rather than showing affection or distraction.
  • - fMRI scans of new mothers in the US showed increased brain activity in areas related to movement, speech, auditory processing, and caregiving in response to their infants’ cries, indicating a strong biological underpinning for caregiving behaviors.
  • - The study highlights universal caregiving reactions among mothers, suggesting these responses are rooted in both evolutionary biology and cultural psychology, while revealing different brain activation patterns in inexperienced nonmothers.
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Early parent-infant relationships play important roles in infants' development. New parents adapt to the developing relationship with their infants to coordinate parenting behaviors in the milieu of infant needs, hormones, moods, and stress. This review highlights research from the past two years, using non-invasive brain-imaging techniques and naturalistic tasks in mothers and fathers in relation to psychological, and endocrine measures.

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Parental responses to their children are crucially influenced by stress. However, brain-based mechanistic understanding of the adverse effects of parenting stress and benefits of therapeutic interventions is lacking. We studied maternal brain responses to salient child signals as a function of Mom Power (MP), an attachment-based parenting intervention established to decrease maternal distress.

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Maternal attachment-related parenting behaviors require mothers to regulate self-related and child-related distress. Emotion regulation is, in turn, influenced by maternal mood and personal developmental history. In the current study we examined how depressive mood may alter maternal limbic system function and functional connectivity underlying defensive and hedonic motivations.

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