- 著者
-
則内 まどか
菊池 吉晃
- 出版者
- 日本生理人類学会
- 雑誌
- 日本生理人類学会誌 (ISSN:13423215)
- 巻号頁・発行日
- vol.21, no.4, pp.135-140, 2016 (Released:2017-10-31)
Parenting plays a critical role in the infant’s survival and optimal development, as well as in the parent-infant
attachment. The parent-infant relationship provides infants with their first social environment, forming templates to
interact with others. In this review, we focus on neuroimaging studies of human maternal brain associated with the
development of mother-infant relationship. First, we review the functional and structural changes in the mother’s
brain during the early postpartum period. Second, we discuss the neural basis of maternal love, in which the orbitofrontal
cortex integrates the reward and interoceptive processing systems, which suggests that a mother’s infant
is not only a reward, but also functions to protect the mother's life through the production of homeostatic emotions
in the mother. Third, we discuss the maternal brain including how the orbitofrontal cortex might possibly regulate
maternal stress during the “terrible twos”. Maternal stress adaptations are important not only for the maternal
behavior, but also for the mother’s well-being and mental health. Finally, we focus on the long-term effects of the
early experience of parental care on the infant’s brain function, including those associated with later parenting and
how maternal brain might shape the infant’s current and future brain.