Your turn, my turn. Neural synchrony in mother–infant proto-conversation

Author:

Nguyen Trinh12ORCID,Zimmer Lucie3ORCID,Hoehl Stefanie1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Developmental and Educational Psychology, University of Vienna, Liebiggasse 5, 1010 Vienna, Austria

2. Neuroscience of Perception and Action Lab, Italian Institute of Technology (IIT), Center for Life Nano and Neuro Science, Viale Regina Elena 291, 00161 Rome, Italy

3. Department of Psychology, Ludwig-Maximilians University Munich, Leopoldstrasse 13, 80802 Munich, Germany

Abstract

Even before infants utter their first words, they engage in highly coordinated vocal exchanges with their caregivers. During these so-called proto-conversations, caregiver–infant dyads use a presumably universal communication structure—turn-taking, which has been linked to favourable developmental outcomes. However, little is known about potential mechanisms involved in early turn-taking. Previous research pointed to interpersonal synchronization of brain activity between adults and preschool-aged children during turn-taking. Here, we assessed caregivers and infants at 4–6 months of age ( N = 55) during a face-to-face interaction. We used functional-near infrared spectroscopy hyperscanning to measure dyads' brain activity and microcoded their turn-taking. We also measured infants’ inter-hemispheric connectivity as an index for brain maturity and later vocabulary size and attachment security as developmental outcomes potentially linked to turn-taking. The results showed that more frequent turn-taking was related to interpersonal neural synchrony, but the strength of the relation decreased over the course of the proto-conversation. Importantly, turn-taking was positively associated with infant brain maturity and later vocabulary size, but not with later attachment security. Taken together, these findings shed light on mechanisms facilitating preverbal turn-taking and stress the importance of emerging turn-taking for child brain and language development. This article is part of a discussion meeting issue ‘Face2face: advancing the science of social interaction’.

Funder

Studienstiftung des Deutschen Volkes

Universität Wien

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

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