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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/27887
Title: Toward an understanding of human caregiving: investigations of brain, affective, and attitudinal responses to infants and children
Authors: Dudin, Aya
Advisor: Hall, Geoffrey B.
Department: Neuroscience
Keywords: amygdala;response to infants;attitudes about children;fMRI;pet ownership;sex differences;postpartum depression;depression;maternal brain;caregiving;caregiving experience;cuteness;affective response;PPD;parity;maternal status
Publication Date: 2022
Abstract: Optimal responsiveness to infant cues, an integral component of parental caregiving, is thought to be determined by multiple factors including maternal mood, previous experiences of caregiving, and infant characteristics. This thesis builds on previous work and details novel investigations of brain, affective, and attitudinal responses to infants/children. In the first two studies, we investigated the effects of maternal mood and parity (previous experiences of caregiving) on brain response to affectively positive infant pictures using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). We found that mothers with postpartum depression showed an elevated right amygdala response to infant pictures in comparison to mothers without PPD and depressed non- mothers. Further, functional connectivity between the bilateral amygdalae and the right insular cortex was negatively correlated with clinical symptoms (self-reported depression and anxiety). Therefore, as depression and anxiety symptoms increased amygdala to insular cortex connectivity decreases and vice versa. In the third study, we developed a novel data-driven infant cuteness (DDIcute) metric using the infant pictures presented in the first two studies. In line with ethological postulations on cuteness (infant characteristics), we found that infant pictures with a higher DDIcute score were associated with increased positive/approach-related affective responses and decreased negative/avoidant-related affective responses. In the fourth study, we investigated whether the sex differences in attitudes about children and childcare were moderated by pet ownership/care (previous experiences of caregiving). We found that pet ownership and care eliminated sex differences in attitudes about children and childcare. This effect was driven by males; compared to males with low levels of experience caring for pets, males with high levels of experience caring for pets had more positive attitudes about children and childcare.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/27887
Appears in Collections:Open Access Dissertations and Theses

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