Andrew Huberman· PhD
There are now brain imaging studies examining the brains of infants and the brains of mothers as they interact and showing that the physical contact between the two,
The headline is broadly defensible, but the qualifications matter. Effect sizes vary by population, the strongest claims rest on shorter trials, and credible voices push back on how it's typically framed.
There are now brain imaging studies examining the brains of infants and the brains of mothers as they interact and showing that the physical contact between the two,
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showing that when a mother and child interact, either through very soothing interactions, like bottle feeding, or breastfeeding, or singing to one's baby, or putting them to sleep, that the brain of the child and the brain of the mother are entering a coordinated state of relaxation.
the mother would make you know sort of um sounds not necessarily words like these kinds of things or humming or or you know bouncing lullabies these sorts of things that's the pro that the pro and then the uh the related release of things like serotonin perhaps oxytocin as well