Neuroscience & Neurology
A Baby’s Smile - Mom’s Natural High
Many people, at one time or another, have witnessed this ritual: a beaming new mother enters with baby pictures. A group of genuinely excited women gather around the new mother admiring the pictures as they are passed around. The new mother is oblivious to the fact that she has showed dozens of pictures at different angles of “Little Johnny” smiling. In her eyes, the baby is adorable and all she wants to do is hold and cuddle him. The mother, who cannot wait until she returns home to her baby, is in a celebratory mood and returns to her desk, which is now decorated with favorite pictures of her smiling bundle of joy.
It turns out that pictures of the smiling babies may be more than just decorative pieces. An interesting study at the Baylor College of Medicine suggests that a baby’s smile may be providing a natural high to the mother. This natural high, as with some foods or drugs, may even be addictive. Recently released in the journal, Pediatrics, the study shows that the brain responds to the facial cues of babies. Specifically, functional MRI scans revealed that the reward- processing areas of the brain associated with dopamine were activated when first time mothers saw their own infants’ happy faces. These dopamine sensitive areas include the substantia nigra/midbrain ventral tegmental area and primary motor cortex. Dopamine is an important neurotransmitter and hormone produced in several areas of the brain but especially the nuclei of the substantia nigra and ventral tegmentum. Among the many important functions of dopamine is its role in motivation, pleasure, and attachment.
Some research scientists believe that there is an association between the limbic system (emotions), associative system (cognition) and motor system (behavior) of the brain that is set into motion when a new mother observes her happy, smiling baby. A cascade of reactions is initiated with that smile, activating important dopamine-associated reward processing areas of the brain, which motivates maternal care and contributes to maternal-fetal attachment. The brain responses to neutral or sad faces from the baby were also recorded and showed a graded response with the least response coming from sad faces and the highest response from smiling faces. More dopamine sensitive areas were activated with happy faces than with sad or neutral faces. However, sad or neutral faces activated a different area of the brain involved in conflict resolution, which prompts an empathetic response from the mother to soothe the baby.
The findings of this study may shed some light on why some new mothers find it extremely difficult to cope with their new baby or why there is a high incidence of child neglect in mothers who are depressed or who are substance abusers. Past studies show that depressed people display decreased emotional responses to happy faces and have more difficulty recognizing facial expressions. Also, cocaine activates dopamine receptors and may compete with reward-processing areas of the brain that respond to infant cues.
More studies are needed to test fathers’ and grandparents’ neural responses to a child. It would be interesting to see if this natural, addictive high is elicited in them as strongly as the new mother.
Reference
L. Strathearn, J. Li, P. Fonagy, P. R. Montague (2008). What’s in a Smile? Maternal Brain Responses to Infant Facial Cues PEDIATRICS, 122 (1), 40-51 DOI: 10.1542/peds.2007-1566
Related Articles
Thursday, November 20, 2008
- The Anti-Psychiatry Movement
- Should Doctors Have Guns?
- Vaccines - A Two-Edged Sword
- Extremist Muslim Doctors Do More Than Heal
- Woman Comparable to Men in Domestic Violence: Stereotypes and their Consequences
- God And Religion: Is It All In Our Heads?
- Anti-Smoking Campaign Doesn't Mess Around
- The Bipolar Trend
- Are You Vegetarian? How Do You Get Enough Protein?
- The Implications of Implanted Chips
- The Science of Brain Freeze
- Is War A Psychosis?
- The Biopsychosocial Model of Health & Illness
- Unhinging from Theory: Autism and Opinions
- Mind-Body: We Want Evidence, Don't We?
- Meditation for Troubled Minds: Can the Mind Heal the Mind?
- Encephalon, Thirty-Third Edition
- Acknowledging Vaccination Concerns
- Health Care and Politics II - The Democrats
- Usually It's Cheaper to Pay Than to Go To Court
- Are We Worshipping Celebrities or Heroes?
- Alcohol 101 - the Best Class on Campus
- School Bullies - Is the Amygdala to Blame?
- Reversing the Irreversible - Neuromotor Prostheses for Spinal Cord Injury
- How Much is a Pound of Prevention Worth?
- Electrical Brain Stimulation Improves Hand Motor Skills
- New Drug Approval - Lacosamide for Epilepsy
- Why Infidelity May Not Be Cheating Anymore
- Alzheimer’s Drug to Treat Binge Eating Disorder
- Brain Blogging, Forty-First Edition
- Diagnosing Child Abuse
- Hypnosis and Chronic Pain
- Hitler’s Guide to Propaganda - The Psychology of Coercion
- McCain’s Health Issues Reflect His Character
- Obama and McCain - Friend or Foe of Science?
- My Amygdala Made Me Vote for McCain/Obama
- Meditate to Learn Compassion
- Drugs and Pharmacology, Eleventh Edition
- What is Intelligence?
- A Unique Struggle Against Juvenile Huntington’s Disease
- There has come winter :(
It became cold and cloudy!
Mood very bad :(
Depress...
- Second hand smoke kills...WOW
I wonder how many dead bodys they will find whe...
- Are you worried about your right to breath clean air? I wouldn’t mind a little o...
- Theoretically this application would work for existing SCI patients, although th...
- You're only saying it's good because they link to you...:P
Although to be fair,...
- There's another good critique of this study at Slate, ...
- "There was no significant change in BMI, body weight, depression, or anxiety. "
...
- The smoke stinks.
It turns everything yellow.
It makes it dificult to breath...
- If you want to escape from reality and stress listen to some good music and exer...
- our best fight against high fructose corn syrup might be the advancement of ...
- Woah! This is amazing!!!
Will this technology be able to be used in the cas...
- Iraq War in 1991 need Medical History of the effects....
- Hi MV - I appreciate yr lengthy reply - thanks!
Well, I found an article that...
- fnx3, I'm sorry to hear about your condition, but I am puzzled. The best source...
- For a couple of skeptical discussions of this see:
...
- CharlesMartel, that's a preceptive phrase 'so they can feel exceptionally filled...
- Although I thought the end of the article was rather dramatic, I think you misse...
- Interesting study, though definitely needs to be on a larger scale. My feeling ...
- I agree with everything Guy says. AS always, people do their uthmost to demonize...
- Hmm - that's interesting. I wonder how it works (if it does?) I'd have thought t...
Advertisement
Sponsored Links
Neuroscience & Neurology
November 17, 2008 | 3 Comments | By Melissa E. Malka
School Bullies - Is the Amygdala to Blame?
More In Neuroscience & Neurology
- Reversing the Irreversible - Neuromotor Prostheses for Spinal Cord Injury
- Electrical Brain Stimulation Improves Hand Motor Skills
- My Amygdala Made Me Vote for McCain/Obama
- A Unique Struggle Against Juvenile Huntington’s Disease
- The Scent Trail - Encoding Memory
Neuroscience & Neurology
Opinion
October 15, 2008 | 1 Comment | By Sajid Surve, DO
The Gift of Life - Part 3
More In Opinion
- China’s Tainted Reputation
- HIPAA Doesn’t Exist For Doctors
- Some Funny Stories From the Trenches
- Are You Vegetarian? How Do You Get Enough Protein?
- The Gift of Life - Part 2
Opinion
Psychiatry & Psychology
November 20, 2008 | 0 Comments | By Jennifer Gibson, PharmD
Are We Worshipping Celebrities or Heroes?
More In Psychiatry & Psychology
- Why Infidelity May Not Be Cheating Anymore
- Hitler’s Guide to Propaganda - The Psychology of Coercion
- What is Intelligence?
- ADHD - A Very Incomplete Puzzle
- Sleep Deprivation, Behavior, and the Young



Leave a Reply