Abstract

Existing studies have indicated that priming secure attachment alters adults’ neural responses to infant faces. However, no study has examined whether this effect exists for motivational behavioral responses, and none of the previous studies included adult faces as a baseline to determine whether the security prime enhances responses to human faces in general or infant faces alone. To address this limitation, the current study recruited 160 unmarried and childless adults in the first phase, and all of them completed a battery of questionnaires, including the Interest in Infants, the Experiences in Close Relationships (ECR), and State Adult Attachment Measure (SAAM). A week later, after priming, 152 (76 security-primed vs. 76 neutrally primed) participants completed the SAAM and a behavioral program assessing their motivational responses to both adult and infant faces (i.e., liking, representational, and evoked responses). A manipulation check showed that the security prime was effective. Then, generalized linear mixed-effects models (GLMMs) showed that security priming enhances adults’ liking, representational, and evoked responses (three components of the motivational system) only to infant faces and not to adult faces. Moreover, hierarchical regression analysis indicated that, even after security priming, there was a substantial linear relationship between positive motivation toward infant faces and the state of adult secure attachment. In summary, this study demonstrated for the first time that promoting the state of adult secure attachment can effectively enhance the effect size of the baby face schema. The current results were interpreted according to Bowlby’s view of the attachment behavioral system.

Highlights

  • Kindchenschema is an important concept proposed by Lorenz (1943) that refers to a series of appearance features typical of young animals or human babies that can cause adults to perceive these infants as cute, motivating their concern and caretaking behavior (Parsons et al, 2010)

  • Through ROI analysis, this study found that increased activation in the insula and anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) to infant crying were positively related to attachment anxiety state, while a higher attachment avoidance state was correlated with decreased amygdala activity to infants and attenuated insula and ACC activation to infant joy

  • Independent samples T-test results showed that the experimental group was not significantly different from the control group in the State Adult Attachment Measure (SAAM), Experiences in Close Relationships (ECR), and Interest in Infants scores (t = 0.151∼1.076, p = 0.284∼0.880)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Kindchenschema (or baby schema) is an important concept proposed by Lorenz (1943) that refers to a series of appearance features typical of young animals or human babies that can cause adults to perceive these infants as cute, motivating their concern and caretaking behavior (Parsons et al, 2010). Since the concept of kindchenschema was proposed, many researchers have studied it and found that adults can effectively evoke the sense of “cuteness” when facing infants’ appearance, odor, sound, and other related cues (Kringelbach et al, 2016; Kou et al, 2020). Among these cues, the face of the infant is thought to be the most typical representative region of the kindchenschema (Glocker et al, 2009). Follow-up studies on kindchenschema mainly focus on baby face schema (Rayson et al, 2017)

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call