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Right frontoinsular cortex and subcortical activity to infant cry is associated with maternal mental state talk

  • Alison E. Hipwell
  • , Chaohui Guo
  • , Mary L. Phillips
  • , James E. Swain
  • , Eydie L. Moses-Kolko

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

60 Scopus citations

Abstract

The study objective was to examine neural correlates of a specific component of human caregiving: maternal mental state talk, reflecting a mother’s proclivity to attribute mental states and intentionality to her infant. Using a potent, ecologically relevant stimulus of infant cry during fMRI, we tested hypotheses that postpartum neural response to the cry of “own” versus a standard “other” infant in the right frontoinsular cortex (RFIC) and subcortical limbic network would be associated with independent observations of maternal mental state talk. The sample comprised 76 urban-living, low socioeconomic mothers (82% African American) and their 4-month-old infants. Before the fMRI scan, mothers were filmed in face-to-face interaction with their infant, and maternal behaviors were coded by trained researchers unaware of all other information about the participants. The results showed higher functional activity in the RFIC to own versus other infant cry at the group level. In addition, RFIC and bilateral subcortical neural activity (e.g., thalamus, amygdala, hippocampus, putamen) was associated positively with maternal mental state talk but not with more global aspects of observed caregiving. These findings held when accounting for perceptual and contextual covariates, such as maternal felt distress, urge to help, depression severity, and recognition of own infant cry. Our results highlight the need to focus on specific components of caregiving to advance understanding of the maternal brain. Future work will examine the predictive utility of this neural marker for mother– child function.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)12725-12732
Number of pages8
JournalJournal of Neuroscience
Volume35
Issue number37
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 16 2015

Keywords

  • Affective-perceptual empathy
  • Mental state talk
  • Right frontoinsular cortex (RFIC)
  • Subcortical limbic region

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