Exploring InterβBrain Coherence Between Fathers and Infants During Maternal Storytelling: An fNIRS Hyperscanning Study
ABSTRACT
The current study examined the inter-brain coherence (IBC) between 34 dyads of fathers and infants 7β9βmonths of age using functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS). We specifically focused on fatherβinfant IBC to broaden the empirical base beyond the motherβinfant connections, as the former has received limited attention. There were three conditions: a baseline condition and two task conditions when the infant and the adult participant jointly listened to maternal storytelling in Cantonese in infant-directed speech (IDS) and adult-directed speech (ADS). Fatherβinfant IBC was compared with strangerβinfant IBC in the same experimental settings. Our results found that fatherβinfant IBC was greater in the baseline and ADS conditions but not in the IDS condition, compared to strangerβinfant IBC. Further, strangerβinfant dyads showed greater IBC in the IDS condition than in the ADS condition, with no significance in fatherβinfant IBC between the two speech conditions. These results identified different inter-brain connection mechanisms between the two dyads. The IBC pattern in strangerβinfant dyads is driven by neural entrainment to mothers' speech, whereas fatherβinfant IBC is more resistant to mothers' behaviours in the co-presence of both parents.