Constructing the “Family Personality”: Can Family Functioning Be Linked to Parent–Child Interpersonal Neural Synchronization?

Author:

Thompson Khalil I.1ORCID,Schneider Clayton J.1,Rocha‐Hidalgo Joscelin2,Jeyaram Shri1,Mata‐Centeno Bedilia1,Furtado Emily1ORCID,Vachhani Shreeja1,Pérez‐Edgar Koraly2,Perlman Susan B.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychiatry Washington University in St. Louis School of Medicine St. Louis Missouri USA

2. Department of Psychology Pennsylvania State University, State College University Park Pennsylvania USA

Abstract

ABSTRACTIntroductionEarly child development occurs within an interactive environment, initially dominated by parents or caregivers, and is heavily influenced by the dynamics of this social context. The current study probed the neurobiology of “family personality”, or family functioning, in the context of parent–child dyadic interaction using a two‐person neuroimaging modality.MethodsOne hundred and five parent–child dyads (child mean age 5 years 4 months) were recruited. Functional near‐infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) hyperscanning was employed to measure neural synchrony while dyads completed a mildly stressful interactive task. Family functioning was measured through the Family Adaptability and Cohesion Scale IV (FACES‐IV).ResultsSynchrony during stress was significantly greater than synchrony during both baseline and recovery conditions for all dyads. A significant interaction between neural synchrony in each task condition and familial balanced flexibility was found, such that higher levels of balanced flexibility were associated with greater changes in frontal cortex neural synchrony as dyads progressed through the three task conditions.DiscussionParent–child dyads from families who display heightened levels of balanced flexibility are also more flexible in their engagement of neural synchrony when shifting between social conditions. This is one of the first studies to utilize a two‐person imaging modality to explore the links between family functioning and interbrain synchrony between parents and their children.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Wiley

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