News Release

Maternal responses to infants' cries

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Researchers report a neurobiological basis for human mothers' responses to infants' cries. The extent to which human caregivers are biologically programmed to respond to their infants' cries remains unclear. Diane Putnick, Marc Bornstein, and colleagues observed the behavior of 684 mothers, with infants approximately 5 months old in 11 countries, and found that across all countries, mothers responded to their infants' crying by picking up and holding the infant, and by talking to the infant. Based on these observations, the authors hypothesized that infants' cries would elicit common responses in the brains of new mothers from different cultures. The authors conducted fMRI experiments involving 43 mothers in the United States, with 3.5 month-old infants, and 44 Chinese mothers, with 7.6 month-old infants. In both sets of mothers, the sound of infants' cries activated the brain's supplementary motor area associated with the intention to move and speak, Broca's area and the superior temporal regions associated with processing speech and complex sounds, and midbrain and striatal regions associated with caregiving. According to the authors, the results suggest a neurobiological and evolutionary basis for the human maternal response to infants' cries.

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Article #17-12022: "Neurobiology of culturally common maternal responses to infant cry," by Marc Bornstein et al.

MEDIA CONTACT: Linda Huynh, Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD; tel: 301-496-5133; e-mail: <nichdpress@mail.nih.gov>


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