Using a technique called magneto-encephalography that measures brain  signals, the Oxford researchers found that a baby's face can seize our attention  in milliseconds, activating an unusual mental organ called the fusiform  gyrus that responds to human faces. Moreover, these distinctive infant  features, unlike the mature features of an adult, trigger a sense of reward and  good feeling in a seventh of a second. Picture Bambi's saucer-size eyes or those  of Mickey Mouse.
 The researchers concluded that the parental instinct is present in all of  us. "It suggests we are probably all hard-wired to respond and care for babies,  to help us perpetuate the species," said Oxford child psychiatrist Alan Stein,  who helped conduct the experiment. "The response to an infant face is too fast  to be under conscious control."
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