homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Infants as young as six months old can sense mother's angry tone

Infants are much more sensitive to emotional content than we thought.

Tibi Puiu
February 27, 2019 @ 9:00 pm

share Share

Credit: Pixabay.

The same words can mean very different things depending on intonation or rhythm. According to a new study, the same brain networks that enable human adults to decipher the emotional content of vocalizations is at play in infants as young as six months old.

Parents are well aware that their children are able to recognize if they’re happy or angry well before they can learn to speak. In adults, emotional content is processed in the frontal and temporal lobes, but it was never clear if such was the case in infants, too. Previous work that relied on MRI machines to scan the brains of infants proved to be challenging because of the highly disturbing noise.

Researchers at the University of Manchester, UK, solved this problem by employing a non-invasive brain imaging method called functional near-infrared spectroscopy. This brain imaging technique involves measuring blood flow to cortical areas.

In an experiment, infants listened to recorded non-speech vocalizations while sitting in their mothers’ laps. The vocalizations were either angry, happy, or neutral in their emotional content.

The researchers also studied the same mother-infant pairs during normal activities such as floor play, carefully quantifying the mother’s interactions with her child. Specifically, the researchers were interested in the degree to which the mother sought to control her infant’s behavior and how sensitive the infant’s behavior was to the mother’s commands.

Both angry and happy vocalizations were found to activate the same fronto-cortical network as in adults. Angry vocalizations elicited the highest level of activation in this brain region, and increased with the mother’s degree of control. This suggests that caregiving can heighten an infant’s sensitivity to angry vocalizations as well as the stress they produce.

“Brain science shows that babies’ brains are sensitive to different emotional tones they hear in voices. Such tones can cause different activation patterns in the infant’s brain areas which are also known to be involved in processing voices in adults and older children. These patterns also reveal that the early care experienced by babies can influence brain responses so that the more intrusive and demanding their mother, the stronger the brain response of these 6-month-olds is to hearing angry voices,” said Chen Zhao, lead author of the new study published in the journal PLOS ONE. 

share Share

A 2,300-Year-Old Helmet from the Punic Wars Pulled From the Sea Tells the Story of the Battle That Made Rome an Empire

An underwater discovery sheds light on the bloody end of the First Punic War.

Scientists Hacked the Glue Gun Design to Print Bone Scaffolds Directly into Broken Legs (And It Works)

Researchers designed a printer to extrude special bone grafts directly into fractures during surgery.

How Much Does a Single Cell Weigh? The Brilliant Physics Trick of Weighing Something Less Than a Trillionth of a Gram

Scientists have found ingenious ways to weigh the tiniest building blocks of life

A Long Skinny Rectangular Telescope Could Succeed Where the James Webb Fails and Uncover Habitable Worlds Nearby

A long, narrow mirror could help astronomers detect life on nearby exoplanets

Scientists Found That Bending Ice Makes Electricity and It May Explain Lightning

Ice isn't as passive as it looks.

The Crystal Behind Next Gen Solar Panels May Transform Cancer and Heart Disease Scans

Tiny pixels can save millions of lives and make nuclear medicine scans affordable for both hospitals and patients.

Satellite data shows New York City is still sinking -- and so are many big US cities

No, it’s not because of the recent flooding.

How Bees Use the Sun for Navigation Even on Cloudy Days

Bees see differently than humans, for them the sky is more than just blue.

Scientists Quietly Developed a 6G Chip Capable of 100 Gbps Speeds

A single photonic chip for all future wireless communication.

This Teen Scientist Turned a $0.50 Bar of Soap Into a Cancer-Fighting Breakthrough and Became ‘America’s Top Young Scientist’

Heman's inspiration for his invention came from his childhood in Ethiopia, where he witnessed the dangers of prolonged sun exposure.