Chubby cheeks, big bright eyes-the characteristics of a baby's face
are thought to provoke nurturing and affection at behavior in adults.
New research suggests that a reward area of the brain initiates this
response.

Neuroscientist Morten L. Kringelbach of the University of Oxford and his
colleagues asked 12 adult, nine of whom were childless, to complete a
computer task while infant an adult faces-comparable in expression and
attractiveness flashed into the screen. The researchers captured the
participants` neural responses with magneto encephalography, an imaging
technique that directly detects brain activity in milliseconds. (In
contrast, the imaging workhorse fMRI measures changes in blood flow, an
indirect indication of brain activity, in seconds).

Although the volunteers ultimately processed the faces using the brain
regions that normally handle such a task, all the participants showed an
early, distinct response to the infant faces alone. Within one seventh
of a second, a spike in activity occurred in the medial orbitofrontal
cortex, an area above the eye sockets linked to the detection of
rewarding stimuli. This activity appears to "tag" infant faces
as special Kringelbach says.
The study offers clues as to why parents with postpartum depression are
less responsive to their infants. Kringelbach adds. He speculates that
depressed moms are "not getting this special signal" from medial
orbitofrontal cortex because of its connection to another brain area
that is implicated in depression.

Happy Learning,

Yovan P. Putra
www.primastudy.com <http://www.primastudy.com>

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