Close X
Monday, December 23, 2024
ADVT 
Health & Fitness

Pay attention to your baby for emotional well being

Darpan News Desk IANS, 27 Oct, 2014 07:28 AM
  • Pay attention to your baby for emotional well being
If a mother responds more sensitively to her baby during playtime, the child is less likely to display callous, unemotional behaviour as a toddler, new research has discovered.
 
Callous and unemotional behaviour includes a lack of guilt and empathy, reduced concern for others' distress and difficulties with understanding emotions.
 
An infant's preference for a person's face, rather than an object, is associated with lower levels of callous and unemotional behaviour during childhood, the findings showed.
 
"This study takes us a step further in understanding the earliest origins of callous and unemotional behaviour," said co-researcher Rachael Bedford from King's College London in Britain.
 
The study involved 213 five-week-old infants. The researchers assessed if the infants spent longer tracking a person's face compared to an inanimate object - in this case a red ball.
 
Greater tracking of the face relative to the ball was linked to lower callous unemotional behaviour when children were two and a half years old.
 
"Callous and unemotional behaviour in children are known to be associated with an increased emotional burden on families as well as later criminality and anti-social behaviour," Bedford concluded.
 
The study appeared in the journal Biological Psychiatry.

MORE Health & Fitness ARTICLES

How to avoid weight gain this festive season

How to avoid weight gain this festive season
Worried about weight gain during festive season? Here are some healthy tips to bail you out....

How to avoid weight gain this festive season

Non-smokers face major health risks in smoking homes

Non-smokers face major health risks in smoking homes
Living with smokers is as bad as living in smoke-free homes in heavily polluted cities such as Beijing or London, researchers said....

Non-smokers face major health risks in smoking homes

Brain chooses high-calorie food for you

Brain chooses high-calorie food for you
Choosing what you eat is not simply a matter of taste. As you glance over a menu, your brain is making decisions based more on a food's calorific content, a study showed...

Brain chooses high-calorie food for you

Heart attack ups depression risk in women

Heart attack ups depression risk in women
In a study involving 160 patients from Vilnius University Hospital Santariskiu Clinics in Lithuania, researchers investigated the impact of...

Heart attack ups depression risk in women

Reheat your pasta to avoid fat

Reheat your pasta to avoid fat
"Once starchy foods such as pasta and potatoes are cooked and cooled, they become resistant to the normal enzymes in the gut that...

Reheat your pasta to avoid fat

Brain myths hampering teaching worldwide

Brain myths hampering teaching worldwide
 Myths about the brain are common among teachers worldwide and are hampering teaching, noted a study that called for better communication...

Brain myths hampering teaching worldwide