PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

For infants, stress may be caught, not taught

2014-02-03
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Anna Mikulak
amikulak@psychologicalscience.org
202-293-9300
Association for Psychological Science
For infants, stress may be caught, not taught New research shows that babies not only pick up on their mother's stress, they also show corresponding physiological changes.

"Our research shows that infants 'catch' and embody the physiological residue of their mothers' stressful experiences," says lead researcher Sara Waters, postdoctoral scholar at the University of California, San Francisco.

The findings are published in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science.

"For many years now, social scientists have been interested in how emotions are transmitted from one person to another," says senior author Wendy Berry Mendes, the Sarlo/Ekman Associate Professor of Emotion at UCSF. Indeed, research in the social sciences has shown that emotions can be "contagious" and that there is emotional synchrony between romantic partners.

Waters, Mendes, and colleague Tessa West of New York University, wanted to extend this research by looking at emotional synchrony in the context of another close relationship: that between mother and child.

"Our earliest lessons about how to manage stress and strong negative emotions in our day-to-day lives occur in the parent-child relationship," Waters explains.

The researchers recruited 69 mothers and their 12- to 14-month-old infants to participate in the study. Researchers attached cardiovascular sensors to both mother and infant and took baseline recordings from each. After settling in, mother and infant were separated and the mother was assigned to give a 5-minute speech to two evaluators, followed by a 5-minute Q&A session. Some mothers received positive signals from the evaluators, including nodding, smiling, and leaning forward. Others received negative feedback, such as frowning, shaking their heads, and crossing their arms. A third group of mothers did not receive any feedback. Mother and infant were later reunited.

As predicted, mothers who received negative feedback reported greater decreases in positive emotion and greater increases in negative emotion than did mothers in the other two conditions. They also showed signs of increased cardiac stress.

And the infants quickly picked up on this stress response: Infants whose mothers received negative feedback showed significant increases in heart rate relative to baseline within minutes of being reunited with their mothers.

Importantly, the infant's response tracked the mother's response – that is, greater the mother's stress response, the greater the infant's stress response, an association that actually became stronger over time.

"Before infants are verbal and able to express themselves fully, we can overlook how exquisitely attuned they are to the emotional tenor of their caregivers," notes Waters. "Your infant may not be able to tell you that you seem stressed or ask you what is wrong, but our work shows that, as soon as she is in your arms, she is picking up on the bodily responses accompanying your emotional state and immediately begins to feel in her own body your own negative emotion."

The researchers note that there are a variety of different channels through which these emotions might be communicated, including odor, vocal tension, and facial expressions. Waters, Mendes, and colleagues are currently investigating the hypothesis that touch plays an important role in emotion contagion.

Ultimately, these findings shed light on how health and well-being can have long-term consequences, transferring across generations:

"A common question in public health circles is how stress and social environment 'gets under the skin' to affect health both at an individual and at a familial level," says Mendes. "With this admittedly modest study, we show a possible mechanism for how stress is transmitted from parent to child."

###

For more information about this study, please contact: Wendy Berry Mendes at wendy.mendes@ucsf.edu.

The article abstract is available online: http://pss.sagepub.com/content/early/2014/01/29/0956797613518352.abstract

This research was supported by the Sarlo/Ekman endowment awarded to W. B. Mendes.

The APS journal Psychological Science is the highest ranked empirical journal in psychology. For a copy of the article "Stress Contagion: Physiological Covariation Between Mothers and Infants" and access to other Psychological Science research findings, please contact Anna Mikulak at 202-293-9300 or amikulak@psychologicalscience.org.

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Tighter economic regulation needed to reverse obesity epidemic -- study

2014-02-03
This news release is available in Spanish, French, and Arabic. Geneva, 3 February 2014. Governments could slow – and even ...

First African study on biodiversity in genetically modified maize finds insects abundant

2014-02-03
Previous studies from ...

Beneficial insects, nematodes not harmed by genetically modified, insect-resistant crops

2014-02-03
A large body of literature has shown that genetically-modified plants that produce proteins from the bacterium Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) to protect themselves ...

Vitamin C and E supplements hampers endurance training

2014-02-03
Vitamin C and E supplements may blunt the improvement of muscular endurance – by disrupting cellular adaptions in exercised muscles – suggests a new study published today [3 February] in The Journal of Physiology. As vitamin ...

A quicker, cheaper way to detect staph in the body

2014-02-03
Chances are you won't know you've got a staph infection until the test results come in, days after the symptoms first appear. But what if your ...

Red alert: Body kills 'spontaneous' blood cancers on a daily basis

2014-02-03
Immune cells undergo 'spontaneous' changes on a daily basis that could lead to cancers if not for the diligent surveillance of our immune system, Melbourne scientists have found. The ...

Stanford researchers discover how brain regions work together, or alone

2014-02-03
Stanford researchers ...

Split decision: Stem cell signal linked with cancer growth

2014-02-03
Researchers at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine have identified a protein critical to hematopoietic stem cell function and blood formation. The finding has potential ...

Making your brain social

2014-02-03
In many people with autism and other neurodevelopmental disorders, different parts of the brain don't talk to each other very well. Scientists have now identified, ...

Transcendental Meditation reduces teacher stress and burnout, new research shows

2014-02-03
A new study published in The Permanente Journal (Vol. 18, No.1) on ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Human eggs power down to protect themselves

NIST releases trove of genetic data to spur cancer research

Adults with heart-healthy metrics had better health from head to toe

Your lungs in chip form

Optimal heart health in children cuts risk of chronic diseases in adulthood

What makes debris flows dangerous

Uranium-based catalyst turns air nitrogen into ammonia

How the brain turns our intended words into the sounds of speech

Light reveals secrets encoded in chiral metasurfaces

Protecting childhood mental health after preterm birth: key factors identified

An aggressive childhood cancer case opens new avenues for advanced cell therapies

Amino acids play a key role in how cells respond to drugs

Deafness and loneliness pave the way for dementia

Food preferences, stigma among reasons students don’t eat free school meals

Depression often associated with early menopause: Why some women are at greater risk

Universal method unlocks entropy calculation for liquids

Induction effect of fluorine-grafted polymer-based electrolytes for high-performance lithium metal batteries

Intensity of opioid use appears to be higher in fentanyl era

'Adventurous’ vs ‘homebody’ anemonefish – research reveals key influences in diversification and evolution

Only Amazon MTurk’s ‘master’ workers provide reliable research data quality

Scientists find the first ice core from the European Alps that dates back to the last Ice Age

Yoga, Tai Chi, walking and jogging may be best forms of exercise for insomnia

Medical tourism for bariatric/weight reduction surgery needs urgent regulation

Funding for lifesaving global health programs forecasted to reach 15-year low, threatening to reverse decades of progress

Exercise could ease symptoms for people with Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia, but support and adequate guidance is lacking

Lost English legend decoded, solving Chaucerian mystery and revealing a medieval preacher’s meme

Stigma driving depression in alopecia patients, rather than illness severity

Eyes on the prize: Decoding eye contact

Technician-led eye clinics could lead to more timely NHS care

University of Birmingham and CBMM partner to drive disruptive innovation in carbon recycling

[Press-News.org] For infants, stress may be caught, not taught