학술논문

The influence of motherhood on neural systems for reward processing in low income, minority, young women
Document Type
article
Source
Subject
Biological Psychology
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Psychology
Mental Health
Brain Disorders
Basic Behavioral and Social Science
Neurosciences
Clinical Research
Behavioral and Social Science
Depression
Aetiology
2.3 Psychological
social and economic factors
Mental health
Good Health and Well Being
Adolescent
Adult
Child
Child
Preschool
Female
Humans
Longitudinal Studies
Minority Groups
Mothers
Motivation
Neural Pathways
Parenting
Poverty
Reward
Stress
Psychological
Young Adult
Motherhood
Life stress
Ventral striatum
Medical and Health Sciences
Psychology and Cognitive Sciences
Psychiatry
Biomedical and clinical sciences
Language
Abstract
ObjectiveGiven the association between maternal caregiving behavior and heightened neural reward activity in experimental animal studies, the present study examined whether motherhood in humans positively modulates reward-processing neural circuits, even among mothers exposed to various life stressors and depression.MethodsSubjects were 77 first-time mothers and 126 nulliparous young women from the Pittsburgh Girls Study, a longitudinal study beginning in childhood. Subjects underwent a monetary reward task during functional magnetic resonance imaging in addition to assessment of current depressive symptoms. Life stress was measured by averaging data collected between ages 8-15 years. Using a region-of-interest approach, we conducted hierarchical regression to examine the relationship of psychosocial factors (life stress and current depression) and motherhood with extracted ventral striatal (VST) response to reward anticipation. Whole-brain regression analyses were performed post-hoc to explore non-striatal regions associated with reward anticipation in mothers vs nulliparous women.ResultsAnticipation of monetary reward was associated with increased neural activity in expected regions including caudate, orbitofrontal, occipital, superior and middle frontal cortices. There was no main effect of motherhood nor motherhood-by-psychosocial factor interaction effect on VST response during reward anticipation. Depressive symptoms were associated with increased VST activity across the entire sample. In exploratory whole brain analysis, motherhood was associated with increased somatosensory cortex activity to reward (FWE cluster forming threshold p