“Tuning in” to your child during play and learning : the science of interpersonal neural synchrony

Mothers are their baby's first, natural teachers. Even from birth, a mother will naturally begin to communicate with her newborn using social cues such as gaze, smiling and touch. These social cues tell the infant that her mother intends to communicate, and is “tuned in” and fully engaged. Infa...

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Main Author: Leong, Victoria
Other Authors: School of Social Sciences
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Language:English
Published: 2020
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/143179
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1431792020-08-11T06:32:44Z “Tuning in” to your child during play and learning : the science of interpersonal neural synchrony Leong, Victoria School of Social Sciences Bookbug Conference (Scottish Book Trust) Social sciences::Psychology Interpersonal Neural Synchrony Early Learning Mothers are their baby's first, natural teachers. Even from birth, a mother will naturally begin to communicate with her newborn using social cues such as gaze, smiling and touch. These social cues tell the infant that her mother intends to communicate, and is “tuned in” and fully engaged. Infants are socially-prepared to detect and respond to such social cues, and neonates will look longer at a picture of an adult who is looking directly at them rather than one who averts their gaze. Direct gaze also creates a state of shared attention (or focus) between mother and infant. When in this neural state, infants’ own attention to new information or objects is prolonged, and this enhances learning. In this talk, I will present findings from our recent brain imaging research, which is investigating the neural mechanisms that help mothers and babies to share attention with and learn from each other, particularly in the context of play. One key mechanism of interest is brain-to-brain synchronisation – the temporal coupling or synchronisation of patterns of neural activity between adult and infant. 2020-08-11T06:32:44Z 2020-08-11T06:32:44Z 2019 Conference Paper Leong, V. (2019). “Tuning in” to your child during play and learning : the science of interpersonal neural synchrony. Bookbug Conference (Scottish Book Trust). https://hdl.handle.net/10356/143179 en © 2019 The Author. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social sciences::Psychology
Interpersonal Neural Synchrony
Early Learning
spellingShingle Social sciences::Psychology
Interpersonal Neural Synchrony
Early Learning
Leong, Victoria
“Tuning in” to your child during play and learning : the science of interpersonal neural synchrony
description Mothers are their baby's first, natural teachers. Even from birth, a mother will naturally begin to communicate with her newborn using social cues such as gaze, smiling and touch. These social cues tell the infant that her mother intends to communicate, and is “tuned in” and fully engaged. Infants are socially-prepared to detect and respond to such social cues, and neonates will look longer at a picture of an adult who is looking directly at them rather than one who averts their gaze. Direct gaze also creates a state of shared attention (or focus) between mother and infant. When in this neural state, infants’ own attention to new information or objects is prolonged, and this enhances learning. In this talk, I will present findings from our recent brain imaging research, which is investigating the neural mechanisms that help mothers and babies to share attention with and learn from each other, particularly in the context of play. One key mechanism of interest is brain-to-brain synchronisation – the temporal coupling or synchronisation of patterns of neural activity between adult and infant.
author2 School of Social Sciences
author_facet School of Social Sciences
Leong, Victoria
format Conference or Workshop Item
author Leong, Victoria
author_sort Leong, Victoria
title “Tuning in” to your child during play and learning : the science of interpersonal neural synchrony
title_short “Tuning in” to your child during play and learning : the science of interpersonal neural synchrony
title_full “Tuning in” to your child during play and learning : the science of interpersonal neural synchrony
title_fullStr “Tuning in” to your child during play and learning : the science of interpersonal neural synchrony
title_full_unstemmed “Tuning in” to your child during play and learning : the science of interpersonal neural synchrony
title_sort “tuning in” to your child during play and learning : the science of interpersonal neural synchrony
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/143179
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