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Shared Minds, Shared Feedback: tracing the influence of parental feedback on shared neural patterns.

Juan ZhangYihui WangYidi MaoChantat LeongZhen Yuan
Published in: Cerebral cortex (New York, N.Y. : 1991) (2024)
Parental feedback affects children in multiple ways. However, little is known about how children, family, and feedback types affect parental feedback neural mechanisms. The current study used functional near-infrared spectroscopy-based hyperscanning to observe 47 mother-daughter pairs's (mean age of mothers: 35.95 ± 3.99 yr old; mean age of daughters: 6.97 ± 0.75 yr old) brain synchronization in a jigsaw game under various conditions. Between parental negative feedback and praise conditions, mother-daughter brain in supramarginal gyrus, left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, right inferior frontal gyrus, and right primary somatic (S1) differed. When criticized, conformity family-communication-patterned families had much worse brain synchronization in S1, left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, and right Wernicke's region than conversational families. Resilient children had better mother-child supramarginal gyrus synchronicity under negative feedback. This study supports the importance of studying children's neurological development in nurturing environments to assess their psychological development.
Keyphrases
  • prefrontal cortex
  • young adults
  • resting state
  • working memory
  • white matter
  • functional connectivity
  • mental health
  • cerebral ischemia
  • gene expression
  • subarachnoid hemorrhage
  • genome wide
  • sleep quality
  • virtual reality