David Diaz’s research while affiliated with Yale University and other places

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Publications (1)


Prior reproductive experience modulates neural responses to infant faces across the postpartum period
  • Article

November 2020

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34 Reads

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10 Citations

Social Neuroscience

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David Diaz

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Angela Maupin

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Infant-cue processing facilitates sensitive maternal care, which is necessary in the formation of healthy mother-infant attachment. Mothers may be particularly focused on cue processing early postpartum, contributing to intense preoccupation with their infant’s well-being. Prior reproductive experience, or parity, may also impact the intensity of infant-cue processing and has been found to influence P300 neural responses to infant faces during pregnancy and at 2 months postpartum. However, we do not know whether this parity effect persists. Thus, we examined the P300 to infant faces in 59 mothers at 2 and 7 months postpartum. Our main finding was that primiparous, as compared to multiparous, women showed a significantly higher P300 to infant faces across the postpartum period. Findings further emphasize the importance of studying parity and its impact on the neural processing of infant faces.

Citations (1)


... Linkages between men's neural changes across the transition to fatherhood, fathering experience, and responses to child signals need further research. Research on mothers suggests that neural responses to infant affective cues are modulated by parity (Maupin et al., 2019) and that primiparous mothers, as compared to multiparous mothers, show heightened alertness toward such cues (Bunderson et al., 2020;Maupin et al., 2016) and rate them as higher in arousal (Parsons et al., 2021). Similar studies on fathers could help us shed light on potential differences between first-time and experienced fathers' reactions toward child signals. ...

Reference:

Men’s Empathy Toward Children’s Emotions Across the Transition to Fatherhood
Prior reproductive experience modulates neural responses to infant faces across the postpartum period
  • Citing Article
  • November 2020

Social Neuroscience