Effects of adult-infant interpersonal neural connectivity on infants’ social learning in Singapore

Affective social referencing via neural synchrony between adult-infant dyads is a critical process that facilitates an infant’s social learning. Hence, this study advances current knowledge by comparing infants’ social learning when interacting with their mothers as compared to strangers and analysi...

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Main Author: Wee, Winnie
Other Authors: Victoria Leong
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2020
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/138220
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1382202020-04-29T05:10:42Z Effects of adult-infant interpersonal neural connectivity on infants’ social learning in Singapore Wee, Winnie Victoria Leong School of Social Sciences VictoriaLeong@ntu.edu.sg Social sciences::Psychology Affective social referencing via neural synchrony between adult-infant dyads is a critical process that facilitates an infant’s social learning. Hence, this study advances current knowledge by comparing infants’ social learning when interacting with their mothers as compared to strangers and analysing the underpinning neural mechanisms. The effects of adult-infant temperament similarity on an infant’s learning are investigated as well. A total of 44 Singaporean mothers and infants (22 infants, 22 mothers) participated in this study. The experiment involves the infant observing the adult (either Mother or Stranger) expressing either positive or negative affect towards a pair of novel objects. Infants’ subsequent interaction with the objects is taken as a measure of learning. During the experiment, EEG was acquired concurrently from both adults and infants as a measure of neural synchrony. Therefore, we hypothesised that neural synchrony could predict social learning, with higher learning present when an infant interacted with their mother than a stranger. Infants should also learn better from an adult with higher temperament similarity. Despite non-significant results found across some of the hypotheses, mainly due to low statistical power (from a limited number of participants) and basic EEG analyses, the pattern of the results did mostly align with the hypotheses. Significantly higher intra-adult and interneural adult-infant connectivity were also observed at the frontal and central areas when the infant interacted with a stranger (i.e., Stranger condition). Future studies should repeat the paradigm on larger sample size to see if the observed results would reach significance. Bachelor of Arts in Psychology 2020-04-29T05:10:42Z 2020-04-29T05:10:42Z 2020 Final Year Project (FYP) https://hdl.handle.net/10356/138220 en application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social sciences::Psychology
spellingShingle Social sciences::Psychology
Wee, Winnie
Effects of adult-infant interpersonal neural connectivity on infants’ social learning in Singapore
description Affective social referencing via neural synchrony between adult-infant dyads is a critical process that facilitates an infant’s social learning. Hence, this study advances current knowledge by comparing infants’ social learning when interacting with their mothers as compared to strangers and analysing the underpinning neural mechanisms. The effects of adult-infant temperament similarity on an infant’s learning are investigated as well. A total of 44 Singaporean mothers and infants (22 infants, 22 mothers) participated in this study. The experiment involves the infant observing the adult (either Mother or Stranger) expressing either positive or negative affect towards a pair of novel objects. Infants’ subsequent interaction with the objects is taken as a measure of learning. During the experiment, EEG was acquired concurrently from both adults and infants as a measure of neural synchrony. Therefore, we hypothesised that neural synchrony could predict social learning, with higher learning present when an infant interacted with their mother than a stranger. Infants should also learn better from an adult with higher temperament similarity. Despite non-significant results found across some of the hypotheses, mainly due to low statistical power (from a limited number of participants) and basic EEG analyses, the pattern of the results did mostly align with the hypotheses. Significantly higher intra-adult and interneural adult-infant connectivity were also observed at the frontal and central areas when the infant interacted with a stranger (i.e., Stranger condition). Future studies should repeat the paradigm on larger sample size to see if the observed results would reach significance.
author2 Victoria Leong
author_facet Victoria Leong
Wee, Winnie
format Final Year Project
author Wee, Winnie
author_sort Wee, Winnie
title Effects of adult-infant interpersonal neural connectivity on infants’ social learning in Singapore
title_short Effects of adult-infant interpersonal neural connectivity on infants’ social learning in Singapore
title_full Effects of adult-infant interpersonal neural connectivity on infants’ social learning in Singapore
title_fullStr Effects of adult-infant interpersonal neural connectivity on infants’ social learning in Singapore
title_full_unstemmed Effects of adult-infant interpersonal neural connectivity on infants’ social learning in Singapore
title_sort effects of adult-infant interpersonal neural connectivity on infants’ social learning in singapore
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/138220
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