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1.
Dev Sci ; 20(2)2017 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27197841

ABSTRACT

Children who experience early caregiving neglect are very likely to have problems developing and maintaining relationships and regulating their social behavior. One of the earliest manifestations of this problem is reflected in indiscriminate behavior, a phenomenon where young children do not show normative wariness of strangers or use familiar adults as sources of security. To better understand the developmental mechanisms underlying the emergence of these problems, this study examined whether institutionally reared children, who experienced early social neglect, had difficulty associating motivational significance to visual stimuli. Pairing stimuli with motivational significance is presumably one of the associative learning processes involved in establishing discriminate or selective relationships with others. We found that early experiences of neglectful caregiving were associated with difficulties in acquiring such associations, and that delays in this developmental skill were related to children's social difficulties. These data suggest a way in which early social learning experiences may impact the development of processes underlying emotional development.


Subject(s)
Association Learning , Child Abuse , Social Behavior , Child , Europe, Eastern , Female , Humans , Institutionalization , Learning , Male , Motivation
2.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 102(47): 17237-40, 2005 Nov 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16303870

ABSTRACT

The formation of social attachments is a critical component of human relationships. Infants begin to bond to their caregivers from the moment of birth, and these social bonds continue to provide regulatory emotional functions throughout adulthood. It is difficult to examine the interactions between social experience and the biological origins of these complex behaviors because children undergo both brain development and accumulate social experience at the same time. We had a rare opportunity to examine children who were reared in extremely aberrant social environments where they were deprived of the kind of care-giving typical for our species. The present experiment in nature provides insight into the role of early experience on the brain systems underlying the development of emotional behavior. These data indicate that the vasopressin and oxytocin neuropeptide systems, which are critical in the establishment of social bonds and the regulation of emotional behaviors, are affected by early social experience. The results of this experiment suggest a potential mechanism whose atypical function may explain the pervasive social and emotional difficulties observed in many children who have experienced aberrant care-giving. The present findings are consistent with the view that there is a critical role for early experience in the development of the brain systems underlying basic aspects of human social behavior.


Subject(s)
Life Change Events , Neuropeptides/urine , Social Behavior , Child Abuse , Child, Preschool , Female , Humans , Male , Neuropeptides/physiology , Neurophysins/physiology , Neurophysins/urine , Oxytocin/physiology , Oxytocin/urine , Protein Precursors/physiology , Protein Precursors/urine , Socialization , Vasopressins/physiology , Vasopressins/urine
3.
Dev Sci ; 7(1): 10-8, 2004 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15323113

ABSTRACT

In the present work, we developed a database of nonlinguistic sounds that mirror prosodic characteristics typical of language and thus carry affective information, but do not convey linguistic information. In a dichotic-listening task, we used these novel stimuli as a means of disambiguating the relative contributions of linguistic and affective processing across the hemispheres. This method was applied to both children and adults with the goal of investigating the role of developing cognitive resource capacity on affective processing. Results suggest that children's limited computational resources influence how they process affective information and rule out attentional biases as a factor in children's perceptual asymmetries for nonlinguistic affective sounds. These data further suggest that investigation of perception of nonlinguistic affective sounds is a valuable tool in assessing interhemispheric asymmetries in affective processing, especially in parceling out linguistic contributions to hemispheric differences.


Subject(s)
Dominance, Cerebral/physiology , Emotions/physiology , Linguistics , Sound , Acoustic Stimulation/methods , Adult , Auditory Perception/physiology , Child , Child, Preschool , Dichotic Listening Tests/methods , Female , Humans , Male , Models, Psychological , Reaction Time/physiology
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