Abstract

A large body of longitudinal research provides compelling evidence for the critical role of early attachment relationships in children’s social, emotional, and cognitive development. It is expected that parent–child attachment relationships may also impact children’s brain development, however, studies linking normative caregiving experiences and brain structure are scarce. To our knowledge, no study has yet examined the associations between the quality of parent–infant attachment relationships and brain morphology during childhood. The aim of this preliminary study was to investigate the prospective links between mother–infant attachment security and whole-brain gray matter (GM) volume and thickness in late childhood. Attachment security toward the mother was assessed in 33 children when they were 15 months old. These children were then invited to undergo structural magnetic resonance imaging at 10–11 years of age. Results indicated that children more securely attached to their mother in infancy had larger GM volumes in the superior temporal sulcus and gyrus, temporo-parietal junction, and precentral gyrus in late childhood. No associations between attachment security and cortical thickness were found. If replicated, these results would suggest that a secure attachment relationship and its main features (e.g., adequate dyadic emotion regulation, competent exploration) may influence GM volume in brain regions involved in social, cognitive, and emotional functioning through experience-dependent processes.

Highlights

  • Seminal work by Harlow and Harlow (1962) suggested that the primate tendency to attach to a caregiver is innate and does not merely reflect physiological needs

  • We report on attachment security assessed at 15 months of age (T1; M = 15.65, SD = 0.97, range = 14.50 – 18.00) and structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) data collected when children were 10–11 years of age (T2, M = 10.59, SD = 0.46, range = 10.0 – 11.67 years)

  • The main findings indicate that children who were more securely attached to their mother in infancy (15 months) had larger gray matter (GM) volume in the bilateral superior temporal sulci, right superior temporal gyrus, right temporo-parietal junction, and the bilateral precentral gyri in late childhood (10–11 years)

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Summary

Introduction

Seminal work by Harlow and Harlow (1962) suggested that the primate tendency to attach to a caregiver is innate and does not merely reflect physiological needs. Infant attachment is expressed by behaviors such as separation distress, Attachment and Brain Morphometry greeting reactions upon reunion, and the tendency to turn to a specific caregiver for reassurance when distressed (Sroufe, 1979; Cassidy, 2016) These innate, universal behavioral tendencies are driven by a biologically based attachment system (Cassidy, 2016). They are subsequently gradually modulated by caregiver responses, progressively leading to the development of individual differences in the expression and organization of infant attachment behavior (Ainsworth et al, 1978; Fearon and Belsky, 2016). Virtually all children become attached to a caregiver, but not all develop secure attachment relationships (Cassidy, 2016)

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