Nonetheless, there is a compelling case for the implementation of interventions to reduce the impact of PND on the quality of the mother-infant relationship and improve child outcomes.
Infant facial features are thought to be powerful elicitors of caregiving
behaviour. It has been widely assumed that men and women respond in different
ways to those features, such as a large forehead and eyes and round protruding
cheeks, colloquially described as ‘cute’. We investigated
experimentally potential differences using measures of both conscious appraisal
(‘liking’) and behavioural responsivity (‘wanting’) to
real world infant and adult faces in 71 non-parents. Overall, women gave
significantly higher ‘liking’ ratings for infant faces (but not
adult faces) compared to men. However, this difference was not seen in the
‘wanting’ task, where we measured the willingness of men and women
to key-press to increase or decrease viewing duration of an infant face. Further
analysis of sensitivity to cuteness, categorising infants by degree of infantile
features, revealed that both men and women showed a graded significant increase
in both positive attractiveness ratings and viewing times to the
‘cutest’ infants. We suggest that infant faces may have similar
motivational salience to men and women, despite gender idiosyncrasies in their
conscious appraisal.
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