Chronic Trauma Impairs the Neural Basis of Empathy in Mothers; Relations to Parenting and Children’s Empathic Abilities

Publication date: Available online 14 May 2019Source: Developmental Cognitive NeuroscienceAuthor(s): Jonathan Levy, Karen Yirmiya, Abraham Goldstein, Ruth FeldmanAbstractEarly life stress carries long-term negative consequences for children's well-being and maturation of the social brain. Here, we utilize a unique cohort to test its effects on mothers' social brain, targeting mothers' neural empathic response in relation to caregiving and child empathic abilities. Mother-child dyads living in a zone of repeated war-related trauma were followed from early childhood and mother-child behavioral synchrony was repeatedly observed. At pre-adolescence(11-13 years) children's empathic abilities were assessed and mothers(Nā€‰=ā€‰88, Nā€‰=ā€‰44 war-exposed) underwent magnetoencephalography(MEG) while exposed to vicarious pain. All mothers showed alpha suppression in sensorimotor regions, indicating automatic response to others' pain. However, trauma-exposed mothers did not exhibit gamma oscillations in viceromotor cortex, a neural marker of mature empathy which utilizes interoceptive mechanisms for higher-order understanding and does not emerge before adulthood. Mother-child synchrony across the first decade predicted mothers' viceromotor gamma, and both synchrony and maternal viceromotor gamma mediated the relations between war-exposure and child empathic abilities, possibly charting a cross-generational pathway from mothers' mature neural empathy to children's empathic capacities. Ou...
Source: Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience - Category: Neuroscience Source Type: research