Recent neuroimaging studies have revealed specific parental neural responses to the stimuli involving infant’s face. However, it remains elusive whether specific neural responses occur in young nulliparous females who were trained to be childcare workers. Twenty-five females who underwent a one-month childcare training (experimental group) and 21 females who did not receive the training (control group) participated in fMRI experiments before and after the training. During fMRI scanning, they were presented with happy, neutral, and sad faces of infants one-by-one in pseudo-randomized order and asked to rate each face based on how positive or negative it was. Only in the experimental group, significant reductions in activity were found in the right amygdala for sad faces and in the left fusiform gyrus for all types of faces after the training. These results suggest that the childcare training affects brain responses to infant’s facial expression in the nulliparous young females.(保育実習の効果を検討するため、実習群とコントロール群において乳児の表情認知課題のfMRIについて実習前後の比較を行った。実習群において、sad条件時に右扁桃体、3つの条件すべてで紡錘状回の賦活が実習後有意な減少がみられた。)
PS27A-06-316
Ayahito Ito, Katsuko Niwano, Motoko Tanabe, Yosuke Sato, Toshikatsu Fujii