+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Insecurely attached dismissive-avoidant mothers’ brains show differences in how they respond to their babies. I found a slideshow online with lots of pictures and diagrams called The Neurobiology of Mother-Infant Attachment. Once I had the page open and my cursor placed on top of it, I simply used the roller between the buttons on my computer’s mouse to scroll through all this visual information and its accompanying captions to ‘get a picture’ of what the differences look like within the brain of a securely attached mother of an infant and the brain of an insecurely attached dismissive-avoidant mother’s brain looks like as they interact with facial cues from their infant.
I was curious about who exactly put this remarkable informative slideshow together, so continued my online search until I found a leaflet featuring a workshop on this same topic that was held in London March 3, 210. The slideshow matches. All of this is the work of Dr. Lane Strathearn, a developmental pediatrician working in Houston, Texas.
++
Oh, MY! What a range of research listings appeared on my computer screen when I Googled this doctor’s name! (This was my mother — who DELIGHTED in my suffering from the moment I was born!) The first one that catches my eye is this one reported on FOX News Thursday, August 27, 2009:
Study: Crying Baby ‘Natural High’ for Some Moms
“A screaming, crying baby is not usually a source of enjoyment for new mothers, but a recent study has found that some moms actually get a “natural high” when faced with their crying infant.”
“The study, which looked in the cause of maternal neglect, involved 30 first-time mothers. Researchers studied their brain activity as they were shown photos of their newborns, with various facial expressions.
The researchers also looked at the factors related to the new mothers own upbringing, including how “secure” their attachment was to parents and careers.
“For mothers with a secure attachment, we found that both happy and sad infant faces produced a reward signal in their brain, or a ‘natural high’,” said Dr. Lane Strathearn of University of Queensland in Australia.
“However, mothers with an insecure attachment pattern didn’t show the same brain response … their own infant’s crying face activated the insula, a brain region associated with unfairness, pain or disgust.”
Moms found as having a secure attachment in childhood showed a greater release of the hormone oxytocin into their bloodstream, according to the report.”
Click here to read more from AAP.
++
I am reminded of this post: +HOOKED ON ‘D’ SMILES – THE HAPPINESS CENTER
And about all the others that I wrote about the genuine smile: Follow this to blog posts
++
This link follows to an article that mentions exactly what my daughter and I have been thinking about regarding the writing of ‘our book’ about my childhood. We cannot consider secure and insecure attachments and the conditions that create them without looking for our answers in the bigger picture – that really shows us what the society is like that creates the individuals that are its members.
University of Queensland – UQ research finds the mum-bub bond may reduce neglect
“UQ researcher Dr Lane Strathearn sees strengthening the bond between mother and baby as a possible way of reducing childhood neglect.
Dr Strathearn’s recently completed PhD identifies how increased pressures placed on mothers by society have reduced the perceived importance of raising children.
“Over the past decade we have seen dramatic changes in the social landscape in which our children are raised, with increasing demands on mothers in particular to balance raising a family with providing an income and meeting educational and career-related demands,” Dr Strathearn said.
“I feel that the basic needs of children have fallen lower and lower on the priority list of families and society, with physical or emotional neglect often the unfortunate result.
“This study emphasises the need to address the basic, universal needs of children, and stresses the importance of this early mother-infant relationship.
“Strengthening this crucial relationship may help to prevent some of the long term consequences of neglect that we are seeing more commonly today, such as delinquency, crime, developmental delay and psychiatric disorders.”
A father of seven, Dr Strathearn grew up in Redcliffe, studied medicine at UQ and completed paediatric training at the Brisbane Mater Children’s Hospital, before heading to the US in 2001.
Now based at Baylor College of Medicine, Texas, he still has close ties to Brisbane, with his PhD completed through UQ’s School of Medicine.
Spanning nine years and drawing upon large longitudinal studies based in Brisbane and brain imaging data collected in Houston, Dr Strathearn’s research aimed to develop a better understanding of the pervasive problem of child neglect.” READ ARTICLE HERE
++
There seems to be no scientific doubt that emotional neglect creates insecure dismissive-avoidant attachment.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++