Development of Attentional Biases for Affective Cues in Infants of Mothers with Depression
State University Of Ny,Binghamton, Binghamton NY
Investigators
Abstract
PROJECT SUMMARY/ABSTRACT The link between depression in mothers and their children is well established, and there is growing evidence that childrenâs biased attention to facial displays of emotion â specifically, attentional avoidance of sad faces â may represent a key mechanism of risk that develops early in life. Despite the strengths of previous research, important questions remain. First, studies that have examined attentional biases in infants of mothers with depression have all been cross-sectional. Second, although researchers have proposed a key role for infant arousal in the development of these attentional biases (i.e., that attentional avoidance of sad faces serves to regulate infantsâ arousal), this has not been explicitly tested. Third, published studies focus on the impact of mothersâ depression on infant outcomes. However, there are likely transactional influences between mothers and their infants. Fourth, depression is a heterogeneous and highly comorbid disorder, leaving unclear whether there are specific aspects of mothersâ depression presentation that are most strongly associated with the development of infantsâ attentional biases. This study was designed to address these key questions and provide a more fine-grained understanding of a specific, early emerging mechanism of risk. The study will include a sample of 6â12-month-old infants of mothers with a history of MDD since the babyâs birth (n=150) or no lifetime history of MDD (n=75) with assessments every 3 months for 12 months (5 assessments total). Aim 1 is to prospectively examine the influence of depression in mothers on the development of infantsâ attentional biases for facial displays of emotion using a combination of mother-infant interaction and computer-based tasks. This will allow us to determine whether depression in mothers predicts infantsâ attentional avoidance of sad faces over their first two years of life. In addition to examining the influence of mothersâ depression broadly, we will also examine aspects of the depression presentation (facial affect and behavior) that may specifically predict the development of infantsâ attention biases. Aim 2 is to examine infantsâ arousal as a mechanism underlying their attentional avoidance of sad faces. To do this, we will measure dynamic changes in infantsâ physiological activity time-locked to shifts in infantsâ attention toward versus away from their mother during standardized mother-infant interaction tasks. Finally, although we are primarily focused on the impact of mothers on infants, we recognize that effects are almost certainly transactional, with infantsâ attentional avoidance further increasing mothersâ depression. Aim 3 is to examine these transactional relations both within each assessment by focusing on changes in mothersâ facial affect during each interaction task and between assessments focusing on prospective changes in mothersâ depressive symptoms. This research will lead to a more detailed understanding of specific mechanisms by which depression in mothers impacts the developmental trajectory of infantsâ attention to facial displays of emotion, which is not only implicated in future depression risk but is also important for infantsâ broader short-term and long-term functioning.
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