Over the last ten years the basic knowledge of brain structure and function has vastly expanded, and its incorporation into the developmental sciences is now allowing for more complex and heuristic models of human infancy. In a continuation of this effort, in this two-part work I integrate current interdisciplinary data from attachment studies on dyadic affective communications, neuroscience on the early developing right brain, psychophysiology on stress systems, and psychiatry on psychopathogenesis to provide a deeper understanding of the psychoneurobiological mechanisms that underlie infant mental health. In this article I detail the neurobiology of a secure attachment, an exemplar of adaptive infant mental health, and focus upon the primary caregiver's psychobiological regulation of the infant's maturing limbic system, the brain areas specialized for adapting to a rapidly changing environment. The infant's early developing right hemisphere has deep connections into the limbic and autonomic nervous systems and is dominant for the human stress response, and in this manner the attachment relationship facilitates the expansion of the child's coping capcities. This model suggests that adaptive infant mental health can be fundamentally defined as the earliest expression of flexible strategies for coping with the novelty and stress that is inherent in human interactions. This efficient right brain function is a resilience factor for optimal development over the later stages of the life cycle.RESUMEN: En los u ´ltimos diez an ˜os el conocimiento ba ´sico de la estructura y funcio ´n del cerebro se ha expandido considerablemente, y su incorporacio ´n como parte de las ciencias del desarrollo permite ahora tener modelos de infancia humana ma ´s complejos y heurı ´sticos. Como una continuacio ´n a este esfuerzo, en este ensayo que contiene dos partes, se integra la actual informacio ´n interdisciplinaria que proviene de los estudios de la unio ´n afectiva en relacio ´n con comunicaciones afectivas en forma de dı ´adas, la neurociencia en el desarrollo inicial del lado derecho del cerebro, la sicofisiologı ´a de los sistemas de tensio ´n emocional, ası ´como la siquiatrı ´a en cuanto a la sicopatoge ´nesis, con el fin de presentar un conocimiento ma ´s profundo de los mecanismos siconeurobiolo ´gicos que sirven de base para la salud mental infantil. En este ensayo se explica con detalle la neurobiologı ´a de una relacio ´n afectiva segura, un modelo de salud mental infantil que se puede adaptar, y el enfoque del mismo se centra en la reglamentacio ´n sicobiolo ´gica que quien primariamente cuida del nin ˜o tiene del maduramiento del sistema lı ´mbico del infante, o sea, las a ´reas del cerebro especialmente dedicadas a la adaptacio ´n a un medio
Over the past decade attachment theory has undergone an intense expansion of both its original scientific foundations as well as its applications to clinical work. Bowlby's original description occurred during a period of behaviorism and an emphasis on the strange situation and secure base behaviors, which then gave way to a dominance of cognition and an emphasis on attachment narratives and reflective capacities. We will argue that in line with Bowlby's fundamental goal of the integration of psychological and biological models of human development, the current interest in affective bodily-based processes, interactive regulation, early experience-dependent brain maturation, stress, and nonconscious relational transactions has shifted attachment theory to a regulation theory. This emphasis on the right brain systems that underlie attachment and developmental change has in turn forged deeper connections with clinical models of psychotherapeutic change, all of which are consonant with psychoanalytic understandings. Modern attachment theory can thus be incorporated into the core of social work theory, research, and practice.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.