Pupillary and Attentional Responses to Infant Facial Expressions in Mothers Across Socioeconomic Variations
Article 2020 en
Authors
SY
Santeri Yrttiaho
BB
Belinda Bruwer
HZ
Heather J. Zar
Abstract
1 min read
Maternal responses to infant facial expressions were examined in two socioeconomically diverse samples of South African mothers (Study I, N = 111; and Study II, N = 214; age: 17-44 years) using pupil and gaze tracking. Study I showed increased pupil response to infant distress expressions in groups recruited from private as compared to public maternity clinics, possibly reflecting underlying differences in socioeconomic status (SES) across the groups. Study II, sampling uniformly low-SES neighborhoods, found increased pupil dilation and faster orientation to expressions of infant distress, but only in the highest income group. These results are consistent with maternal physiological and attentional sensitivity to infant distress cues but challenge the universality of this sensitivity across socioeconomic diversity.
Santeri Yrttiaho, Belinda Bruwer, Heather J. Zar, Kirsten A. Donald, Susan Malcolm‐Smith, Lee Ginton, Nadia Hoffman, Eileen Vuong, Dana Niehaus, Jukka Leppänen, Dan Joseph Stein
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