| Literature DB >> 30295323 |
Eeva-Leena Kataja1, Linnea Karlsson1,2, Jukka M Leppänen3, Juho Pelto1, Tuomo Häikiö1, Saara Nolvi1, Henri Pesonen4, Christine E Parsons5, Jukka Hyönä1, Hasse Karlsson1,2.
Abstract
We examined how infants' attentional disengagement from happy, fearful, neutral, and phase-scrambled faces at 8 months, as assessed by eye tracking, is associated with trajectories of maternal depressive symptoms from early pregnancy to 6 months postpartum (decreasing n = 48, increasing n = 34, and consistently low symptom levels n = 280). The sample (mother-infant dyads belonging to a larger FinnBrain Birth Cohort Study) was collected between 5/2013-6/2016. The overall disengagement probability from faces to distractors was not related to maternal depressive symptoms, but fear bias was heightened in infants whose mothers reported decreasing or increasing depressive symptoms. Exacerbated attention to fearful faces in infants of mothers with depressive symptoms may be independent of the timing of the symptoms in the pre- and postnatal stages.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30295323 DOI: 10.1111/cdev.13152
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Child Dev ISSN: 0009-3920