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Neural representation of the parent-child attachment from infancy to adulthood. | LitMetric

Neural representation of the parent-child attachment from infancy to adulthood.

Soc Cogn Affect Neurosci

Center for Developmental Social Neuroscience, Interdisciplinary Center Herzliya, Herzliya 4610101, Israel.

Published: July 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • Attachment theory suggests that the bond between mother and child shapes how individuals view relationships throughout their lives.
  • A study tracked mothers and children for 20 years, recording their interactions at different ages and examining brain responses to familiar versus unfamiliar interactions.
  • Results showed that familiar interactions activated key areas of the brain consistently, regardless of age, indicating that attachment representations remain stable and connected across development.

Article Abstract

Attachment theory is built on the assumption of consistency; the mother-infant bond is thought to underpin the life-long representations individuals construct of attachment relationships. Still, consistency in the individual's neural response to attachment-related stimuli representing his or her entire relational history has not been investigated. Mothers and children were followed across two decades and videotaped in infancy (3-6 months), childhood (9-12 years) and young adulthood (18-24 years). In adulthood, participants underwent functional magnetic resonance imaging while exposed to videos of own mother-child interactions (Self) vs unfamiliar interactions (Other). Self-stimuli elicited greater activations across preregistered nodes of the human attachment network, including thalamus-to-brainstem, amygdala, hippocampus, anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), insula and temporal cortex. Critically, self-stimuli were age-invariant in most regions of interest despite large variability in social behavior, and Bayesian analysis showed strong evidence for lack of age-related differences. Psycho-physiological interaction analysis indicated that self-stimuli elicited tighter connectivity between ACC and anterior insula, consolidating an interface associating information from exteroceptive and interceptive sources to sustain attachment representations. Child social engagement behavior was individually stable from infancy to adulthood and linked with greater ACC and insula response to self-stimuli. Findings demonstrate overlap in circuits sustaining parental and child attachment and accord with perspectives on the continuity of attachment across human development.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9250301PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/scan/nsab132DOI Listing

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