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1.
Front Psychol ; 10: 440, 2019.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30890983

ABSTRACT

Childhood maltreatment is a critical problem in the United States. Much attention has been paid to the negative outcomes suffered by victims of abuse. Less attention has been devoted to understanding the emotional environments of maltreated children. One assumption, which has stood without empirical test, is that abused children encounter a high degree of anger in their home environments. Anger exposure is thought to be a source of stress for children in abusive environments and a potential link between the experience of abuse and the development of health and behavioral problems. We tested this notion by assessing data on over 1,000 parents and guardians of 3- to 17-year-old children who were participants in child development studies. Abuse was measured via records from Child Protective Services regarding substantiated and unsubstantiated claims of abuse as well as parent/guardian report. We compared self-reported experiences of anger from parents/guardians of children who have experienced abuse with those who have not. We found support for the claim that caregivers of abused children experience and express high levels of anger. Better characterization of the emotional environments in which abused children develop is critical for understanding how and why abuse affects children and has important implications for informing interventions.

2.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 114(51): 13549-13554, 2017 12 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29203671

ABSTRACT

Individuals who have experienced chronic and high levels of stress during their childhoods are at increased risk for a wide range of behavioral problems, yet the neurobiological mechanisms underlying this association are poorly understood. We measured the life circumstances of a community sample of school-aged children and then followed these children for a decade. Those from the highest and lowest quintiles of childhood stress exposure were invited to return to our laboratory as young adults, at which time we reassessed their life circumstances, acquired fMRI data during a reward-processing task, and tested their judgment and decision making. Individuals who experienced high levels of early life stress showed lower levels of brain activation when processing cues signaling potential loss and increased responsivity when actually experiencing losses. Specifically, those with high childhood stress had reduced activation in the posterior cingulate/precuneus, middle temporal gyrus, and superior occipital cortex during the anticipation of potential rewards; reduced activation in putamen and insula during the anticipation of potential losses; and increased left inferior frontal gyrus activation when experiencing an actual loss. These patterns of brain activity were associated with both laboratory and real-world measures of individuals' risk taking in adulthood. Importantly, these effects were predicated only by childhood stress exposure and not by current levels of life stress.


Subject(s)
Decision Making , Reward , Stress, Psychological/psychology , Child , Child Abuse/psychology , Female , Humans , Male , Stress, Psychological/epidemiology , Young Adult
3.
Dev Psychopathol ; 29(5): 1895-1903, 2017 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29162190

ABSTRACT

Individuals who have experienced high levels of childhood stress are at increased risk for a wide range of behavioral problems that persist into adulthood, yet the neurobiological and molecular mechanisms underlying these associations remain poorly understood. Many of the difficulties observed in stress-exposed children involve problems with learning and inhibitory control. This experiment was designed to test individuals' ability to learn to inhibit responding during a laboratory task. To do so, we measured stress exposure among a community sample of school-aged children, and then followed these children for a decade. Those from the highest and lowest quintiles of childhood stress exposure were invited to return to our laboratory as young adults. At that time, we reassessed their life stress exposure, acquired functional magnetic resonance imaging data during an inhibitory control task, and assayed these individuals' levels of methylation in the FK506 binding protein 5 (FKBP5) gene. We found that individuals who experienced high levels of stress in childhood showed less differentiation in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex between error and correct trials during inhibition. This effect was associated only with childhood stress exposure and not by current levels of stress in adulthood. In addition, FKBP5 methylation mediated the association between early life stress and inhibition-related prefrontal activity. These findings are discussed in terms of using multiple levels of analyses to understand the ways in which adversity in early development may affect adult behavioral adaptation.


Subject(s)
Adult Survivors of Child Adverse Events/psychology , DNA Methylation , Life Change Events , Neural Inhibition , Prefrontal Cortex/physiopathology , Stress, Psychological/genetics , Tacrolimus Binding Proteins/genetics , Adolescent , Child , Female , Functional Neuroimaging , Humans , Longitudinal Studies , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Prefrontal Cortex/diagnostic imaging , Prospective Studies , Risk , Stress, Psychological/physiopathology , Stress, Psychological/psychology , Young Adult
4.
J Child Psychol Psychiatry ; 58(7): 770-778, 2017 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28158896

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Children who experience early adversity often develop emotion regulatory problems, but little is known about the mechanisms that mediate this relation. We tested whether general associative learning processes contribute to associations between adversity, in the form of child maltreatment, and negative behavioral outcomes. METHODS: Eighty-one participants between 12 and 17 years of age were recruited for this study and completed a probabilistic learning Task. Forty-one of these participants had been exposed to physical abuse, a form of early adversity. Forty additional participants without any known history of maltreatment served as a comparison group. All participants (and their parents) also completed portions of the Youth Life Stress Interview to understand adolescent's behavior. We calculated measures of associative learning, and also constructed mathematical models of learning. RESULTS: We found that adolescents exposed to high levels of adversity early in their lives had lower levels of associative learning than comparison adolescents. In addition, we found that impaired associative learning partially explained the higher levels of behavioral problems among youth who suffered early adversity. Using mathematical models, we also found that two components of learning were specifically affected in children exposed to adversity: choice variability and biases in their beliefs about the likelihood of rewards in the environment. CONCLUSIONS: Participants who had been exposed to early adversity were less able than their peers to correctly learn which stimuli were likely to result in reward, even after repeated feedback. These individuals also used information about known rewards in their environments less often. In addition, individuals exposed to adversity made decisions early in the learning process as if rewards were less consistent and occurred more at random. These data suggest one mechanism through which early life experience shapes behavioral development.


Subject(s)
Adolescent Behavior/physiology , Association Learning/physiology , Decision Making/physiology , Problem Behavior , Reward , Adolescent , Child , Child Abuse , Female , Humans , Male , Models, Theoretical , Probability Learning
5.
Dev Psychobiol ; 56(5): 1110-8, 2014 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24014461

ABSTRACT

This study examined balance and bilateral coordination skills in a sample of internationally adopted, post-institutionalized (PI) children. We compared the performance of these PI children to two age-matched groups. One was a group of children who were internationally adopted from foster care (FC). The second group consisted of non-adopted children being raised in their birth families, who served as controls (Control). Both PI and FC children scored lower than control children on balance, while PI children scored lower than both FC and control children on bilateral coordination. These results suggest that aspects of institutional rearing impact the development of bilateral coordination, while factors common to internationally adopted children other than institutionalization impact the development of balance. Region of birth (Asia, Latin/South America, Russia/Eastern Europe) did not moderate associations between institutional duration and bilateral coordination.


Subject(s)
Child Development/physiology , Child, Institutionalized , Motor Skills/physiology , Postural Balance/physiology , Social Isolation , Child , Female , Humans , Male
6.
Dev Med Child Neurol ; 54(6): 527-31, 2012 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22413752

ABSTRACT

AIM: This study sought to examine the effect of environmental enrichment on the motor skills of children adopted from orphanage settings. We investigated balance and bilateral coordination skills in 33 internationally adopted postinstitutionalized children (16 males, 17 females; age range 8 y 5 mo-15 y 10 mo; mean age 10 y 9 mo; SD 2 y 2 mo) and compared them with 34 non-institutionalized children (21 males, 13 females; age range 8 y 3 mo-14 y 10 mo; mean age 11 y 2 mo; SD 2 y 1 mo) being raised in their birth families. METHOD: The children were individually administered the balance and bilateral coordination subtests of the Bruininks-Oseretsky Test of Motor Proficiency in a research laboratory. Parents completed questionnaires about developmental history, family environment, and orphanage care. RESULTS: Postinstitutionalized children showed motor system delays compared with the non-institutionalized comparison children (postinstitutionalized balance mean 9.44, SD 5.92, comparison children balance mean 14.12, SD 4.39; postinstitutionalized bilateral coordination mean 11.97, SD 5.43, comparison children mean 19.97, SD 3.97). The length of time that children remained institutionalized before adoption predicted balance delays (b=-1.57, t=-2.33, p=0.027) and the severity of caregiving deprivation the children experienced correlated with bilateral coordination (r=-0.44, p=0.013). INTERPRETATION: These findings suggest that institutionalized settings do not provide the early life experiences needed for the development of age-level motor skills later in childhood and that simple environmental enrichment following adoption is not enough to remediate skills. Children who have experienced early institutional care may benefit from early identification and targeted intervention.


Subject(s)
Developmental Disabilities/etiology , Functional Laterality/physiology , Motor Skills Disorders/etiology , Sensation Disorders/etiology , Adolescent , Adoption , Child , Child, Institutionalized , Developmental Disabilities/diagnosis , Female , Humans , Male , Motor Skills Disorders/diagnosis , Postural Balance/physiology , Regression Analysis , Sensation Disorders/diagnosis , Severity of Illness Index
7.
J Speech Lang Hear Res ; 55(1): 45-54, 2012 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22199198

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: In this study, the authors investigated sentence comprehension and spatial working memory abilities in a sample of internationally adopted, postinstitutionalized (PI) children. The authors compared the performance of these PI children with that of an age-matched group of children living with their birth families. They hypothesized that PI children would perform below clinical threshold on tasks of sentence comprehension and that poor sentence comprehension would be associated with poor performance in working memory. METHOD: Twenty-three PI children and 36 comparison children were administered sentence comprehension and spatial memory tasks from standardized assessments. RESULTS: Some oral sentence comprehension skills and the spatial working memory skills were weaker in the school-age PI children than in the age-matched comparison children. A mediational analysis demonstrated that poor spatial working memory performance partially explains the sentence comprehension differences between the 2 groups. CONCLUSION: These findings provide valuable information to better plan early intervention and special education for PI children.


Subject(s)
Child Language , Child, Institutionalized , Comprehension , Critical Period, Psychological , Memory, Short-Term , Spatial Behavior , Adoption , Case-Control Studies , Child , Female , Humans , Language Tests , Male , Matched-Pair Analysis , Maternal Deprivation , Orphanages , Reference Values , Semantics , Social Environment
8.
Child Dev ; 81(1): 224-36, 2010.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20331664

ABSTRACT

The neurodevelopmental sequelae of early deprivation were examined by testing (N = 132) 8- and 9-year-old children who had endured prolonged versus brief institutionalized rearing or rearing in the natal family. Behavioral tasks included measures that permit inferences about underlying neural circuitry. Children raised in institutionalized settings showed neuropsychological deficits on tests of visual memory and attention, as well as visually mediated learning and inhibitory control. Yet, these children performed at developmentally appropriate levels on similar tests where auditory processing was also involved and on tests assessing executive processes such as rule acquisition and planning. These findings suggest that specific aspects of brain-behavioral circuitry may be particularly vulnerable to postnatal experience.


Subject(s)
Child Development , Child, Institutionalized/psychology , Cognition , Critical Period, Psychological , Memory , Psychosocial Deprivation , Adoption/psychology , Attention/physiology , Auditory Perception/physiology , Child , Child Development/physiology , Cognition/physiology , Female , Humans , Male , Memory/physiology , Neuropsychological Tests , Psychomotor Performance/physiology , Time Factors , Visual Perception/physiology
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