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. 2018 Sep 1;193(Pt A):43-54.
doi: 10.1016/j.physbeh.2017.12.033. Epub 2018 May 3.

Explaining individual variation in paternal brain responses to infant cries

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Explaining individual variation in paternal brain responses to infant cries

Ting Li et al. Physiol Behav. .

Abstract

Crying is the principal means by which newborn infants shape parental behavior to meet their needs. While this mechanism can be highly effective, infant crying can also be an aversive stimulus that leads to parental frustration and even abuse. Fathers have recently become more involved in direct caregiving activities in modern, developed nations, and fathers are more likely than mothers to physically abuse infants. In this study, we attempt to explain variation in the neural response to infant crying among human fathers, with the hope of identifying factors that are associated with a more or less sensitive response. We imaged brain function in 39 first-time fathers of newborn infants as they listened to both their own and a standardized unknown infant cry stimulus, as well as auditory control stimuli, and evaluated whether these neural responses were correlated with measured characteristics of fathers and infants that were hypothesized to modulate these responses. Fathers also provided subjective ratings of each cry stimulus on multiple dimensions. Fathers showed widespread activation to both own and unknown infant cries in neural systems involved in empathy and approach motivation. There was no significant difference in the neural response to the own vs. unknown infant cry, and many fathers were unable to distinguish between the two cries. Comparison of these results with previous studies in mothers revealed a high degree of similarity between first-time fathers and first-time mothers in the pattern of neural activation to newborn infant cries. Further comparisons suggested that younger infant age was associated with stronger paternal neural responses, perhaps due to hormonal or novelty effects. In our sample, older fathers found infant cries less aversive and had an attenuated response to infant crying in both the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex (dACC) and the anterior insula, suggesting that compared with younger fathers, older fathers may be better able to avoid the distress associated with empathic over-arousal in response to infant cries. A principal components analysis revealed that fathers with more negative emotional reactions to the unknown infant cry showed decreased activation in the thalamus and caudate nucleus, regions expected to promote positive parental behaviors, as well as increased activation in the hypothalamus and dorsal ACC, again suggesting that empathic over-arousal might result in negative emotional reactions to infant crying. In sum, our findings suggest that infant age, paternal age and paternal emotional reactions to infant crying all modulate the neural response of fathers to infant crying. By identifying neural correlates of variation in paternal subjective reactions to infant crying, these findings help lay the groundwork for evaluating the effectiveness of interventions designed to increase paternal sensitivity and compassion.

Keywords: Cry; Father; Infant; fMRI.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Activations (orange) and deactivations (blue) for the contrast between the unknown infant cry and its control stimulus (UC-UCon) for A) the present study of fathers with newborn infants and B), C) two previous studies of fathers with toddlers. All images are similarly thresholded with clusters determined by Z>3.1 (voxel-wise 1-tailed p<0.001), and a family-wise error (FWE)-corrected cluster significance threshold of p<0.05 was applied to the suprathreshold clusters. PCC=posterior cingulate cortex, mPFC=medial prefrontal cortex, IFG=inferior frontal gyrus, AC=auditory cortex.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Correlations between paternal age, subjective ratings and neural response to own infant cry. A) Image showing regions with significant negative correlations between paternal age and activation for OC-OCon; image is thresholded with clusters determined by Z>3.1 (voxel-wise 1-tailed p<0.001), and a family-wise error (FWE)-corrected cluster significance threshold of p<0.05 was applied to the suprathreshold clusters, B) scatterplot of paternal age vs. dACC activation for the contrast OC-OCon, C) scatterplot of paternal age vs. own infant cry aversiveness, D) scatterplot of dorsal ACC activation for OC-OCon vs. own cry aversiveness.
Figure 3
Figure 3
Correlations between principal components of subjective ratings and neural responses to the unknown infant cry. A) regions in which UC-UCon is negatively correlated with PC1, B) regions in which UC-Con is positively correlated with PC2. Images are thresholded with clusters determined by Z>3.1 (voxel-wise 1-tailed p<0.001), and a family-wise error (FWE)-corrected cluster significance threshold of p<0.05 was applied to the suprathreshold clusters.

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