Department of Psychology, Columbia University, New York, NY 10027, USA; email:
Department of Psychiatry, Melbourne University, Melbourne, Victoria 3010, Australia.
Annu Rev Clin Psychol. 2019 May 7;15:345-369. doi: 10.1146/annurev-clinpsy-050718-095727. Epub 2019 Feb 20.
Children's development is largely dependent on caregiving; when caregiving is disrupted, children are at increased risk for numerous poor outcomes, in particular psychopathology. Therefore, determining how caregivers regulate children's affective neurobiology is essential for understanding psychopathology etiology and prevention. Much of the research on affective functioning uses fear learning to map maturation trajectories, with both rodent and human studies contributing knowledge. Nonetheless, as no standard framework exists through which to interpret developmental effects across species, research often remains siloed, thus contributing to the current therapeutic impasse. Here, we propose a developmental ecology framework that attempts to understand fear in the ecological context of the child: their relationship with their parent. By referring to developmental goals that are shared across species (to attach to, then, ultimately, separate from the parent), this framework provides a common grounding from which fear systems and their dysfunction can be understood, thus advancing research on psychopathologies and their treatment.
儿童的发展在很大程度上依赖于照护;当照护受到干扰时,儿童会面临许多不良后果的风险增加,尤其是精神病理学方面的后果。因此,确定照护者如何调节儿童的情感神经生物学对于理解精神病理学的病因和预防至关重要。许多关于情感功能的研究使用恐惧学习来映射成熟轨迹,啮齿动物和人类研究都为此做出了贡献。尽管如此,由于没有标准框架可以解释跨物种的发展影响,因此研究往往仍然孤立无援,从而导致了当前的治疗僵局。在这里,我们提出了一个发展生态学框架,试图从儿童与其父母的关系这一生态背景来理解恐惧。通过参考跨物种共享的发展目标(即依附,然后最终与父母分离),这个框架提供了一个共同的基础,从而可以理解恐惧系统及其功能障碍,从而推进对精神病理学及其治疗的研究。