Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

Beware! Baby's Cry Can Alter Your Brain Functions

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 May, 2016 11:36 AM
    A constantly crying baby can not only hamper your peace, it can also rattles your brain functions and alter the way you think and act to make daily decisions, a study has found.
     
    The brain data revealed that the infant cries reduced attention to the task and triggered greater cognitive conflict processing than infant laughs.
     
    "Parental instinct appears to be hardwired yet no one talks about how this instinct might include cognition," said David Haley from the University of Toronto.
     
    The team looked at infant vocalisations -- in this case, audio clips of a baby laughing or crying -- and its effect on adults who completed a cognitive conflict task. 
     
    They asked participants to rapidly identify the colour of a printed word while ignoring the meaning of the word itself. 
     
    Brain activity was measured using electroencephalography (EEG), which took place immediately after a two-second audio clip of an infant vocalisation. 
     
    Cognitive conflict processing is important because it controls attention -- one of the most basic executive functions needed to complete a task or make a decision. 
     
    A baby's cry has been shown to cause aversion in adults but it could also be creating an adaptive response, "switching on" the cognitive control parents use in effectively responding to their child's emotional needs while also addressing other demands in everyday life, Haley added in a paper published in the journal PLOS ONE. 
     
    "If an infant's cry activates cognitive conflict in the brain, it could also be teaching parents how to focus their attention more selectively," he added.
     
    The findings add to a growing body of research suggesting that infants occupy a privileged status in our neurobiological programming, one deeply rooted in our evolutionary past. 
     
    But, as Haley noted, it also reveals an important adaptive cognitive function in the human brain.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    'I Just Got Shot': US Boy Posts Bloody Selfie Immediately After He Was Hit By Arizona Shooting

    'I Just Got Shot': US Boy Posts Bloody Selfie Immediately After He Was Hit By Arizona Shooting
    A 20-year-old US student who was shot in the shoulder decided to post a smiling selfie with the bleeding gunshot wound on social media rather than calling for medical help.

    'I Just Got Shot': US Boy Posts Bloody Selfie Immediately After He Was Hit By Arizona Shooting

    Love Begins To Pour When Men Come Home From Work

    Love Begins To Pour When Men Come Home From Work
    Absence does make the heart grow fonder. This is the outcome of new research that found that the level of the "love" hormone oxytocin increases when people come home after a tiring day at work.

    Love Begins To Pour When Men Come Home From Work

    Informal Email Address Hampers Your Hiring Chances

    Informal Email Address Hampers Your Hiring Chances
    An applicant's email address can greatly impact first impressions and affect one's chances of getting hired, according to a new study.

    Informal Email Address Hampers Your Hiring Chances

    Better Breakfast Leads To Higher Grades In Schools

    Better Breakfast Leads To Higher Grades In Schools
    Reinforcing the connection between good nutrition and good grades, researchers have found that free school breakfasts help students from low-income families perform better academically.

    Better Breakfast Leads To Higher Grades In Schools

    In Battle For Booming Us Coffee Pod Market, It's Giant Keurig Vs. The Recyclables

    In Battle For Booming Us Coffee Pod Market, It's Giant Keurig Vs. The Recyclables
    LINCOLN, Calif. — One measure of how heated the environmental battle has become over coffee giant Keurig Green Mountain's $5 billion-a-year plastic pods is how often the company's opponents use galactic comparisons.

    In Battle For Booming Us Coffee Pod Market, It's Giant Keurig Vs. The Recyclables

    Watching Porn Could Improve Your Sex Life

    Watching Porn Could Improve Your Sex Life
    Watching porn can actually enhance sexual arousal and is unlikely to cause erectile problems, a study from the University of California, Los Angeles and Concordia University has revealed.

    Watching Porn Could Improve Your Sex Life