Department of Psychology, University of Denver, Denver, CO, USA; Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior, University of California-Irvine, Hewitt Hall, Irvine, CA 92697, USA.
Department of Psychology, University of Turku, Turku, Finland; Institute of Clinical Medicine, Turku Brain and Mind Center, FinnBrain Birth Cohort Study, University of Turku, Turku, Finland.
EBioMedicine. 2019 Aug;46:256-263. doi: 10.1016/j.ebiom.2019.07.025. Epub 2019 Jul 27.
Early life experiences have persisting influence on brain function throughout life. Maternal signals constitute a primary source of early life experiences, and their quantity and quality during sensitive developmental periods exert enduring effects on cognitive function and emotional and social behaviors. Here we examined if, in addition to established qualitative dimensions of maternal behavior during her interactions with her infant and child, patterns of maternal signals may contribute to the maturation of children's executive functions. We focused primarily on effortful control, a potent predictor of mental health outcomes later in life.
In two independent prospective cohorts in Turku, Finland (N = 135), and Irvine, CA, USA (N = 192) that differed significantly in race/ethnicity and sociodemographic parameters, we assessed whether infant exposure to unpredictable patterns of maternal-derived sensory signals portended poor effortful control.
In both the Irvine and Turku cohorts, unpredictable sequences of maternal behavior during infancy were associated with worse effortful control at one year of age. Longitudinal analyses demonstrated that this association persisted for as long as each cohort was assessed-until two years of age in the Turku cohort and to 9.5 years in the Irvine cohort. The relation of unpredictable maternal signals during infancy and the measures of executive function persisted after adjusting for covariates.
The consistency of our findings across two cohorts from different demographic backgrounds substantiated the finding that patterns, and specifically unpredictable sequences, of maternal behaviors may influence the development of executive functions which may be associated with vulnerability to subsequent psychopathology. FUND: This research was supported by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) awards P50MH096889, HD051852, NS041298, HD02413, HD050662, HD065823, and by the FinnBrain funders: Academy of Finland (129839, 134950, 253270, 286829, 287908, 308176, 308252), Jane and Aatos Erkko Foundation, Signe and Ane Gyllenberg Foundation, Yrjö Jahnsson Foundation, and State Research Grants (P3498, P3654).
早期生活经历对终生的大脑功能有持久影响。母体信号是早期生活经历的主要来源,其在敏感发育阶段的数量和质量对认知功能以及情绪和社会行为具有持久影响。在这里,我们研究了除了母亲在与婴儿和儿童互动期间的行为的既定定性维度之外,母体信号的模式是否可能有助于儿童执行功能的成熟。我们主要关注努力控制,这是预测以后心理健康结果的有力指标。
我们在芬兰图尔库的两个独立前瞻性队列(N=135)和美国加利福尼亚州欧文的两个独立前瞻性队列(N=192)中进行了研究,这两个队列在种族/民族和社会人口统计学参数方面存在显著差异,我们评估了婴儿是否接触到母体衍生感觉信号的不可预测模式是否预示着努力控制能力差。
在欧文和图尔库两个队列中,婴儿期母体行为的不可预测序列与一岁时的努力控制能力较差有关。纵向分析表明,这种关联一直持续到每个队列进行评估的时间-在图尔库队列中持续到两岁,在欧文队列中持续到 9.5 岁。在调整了协变量后,婴儿期不可预测的母体信号与执行功能的测量之间的关系仍然存在。
我们从两个来自不同人口统计学背景的队列中获得的发现的一致性证实了这样一种观点,即母体行为的模式,特别是不可预测的序列,可能会影响执行功能的发展,而这可能与随后出现精神病理学的易感性有关。
这项研究得到了美国国立卫生研究院(NIH)授予的 P50MH096889、HD051852、NS041298、HD02413、HD050662、HD065823 以及 FinnBrain 基金的支持:芬兰科学院(129839、134950、253270、286829、287908、308176、308252)、简和阿托·埃尔科基金会、西涅和安妮·吉伦伯格基金会、约尔约·雅恩松基金会以及国家研究基金会(P3498、P3654)。