Literature DB >> 20070189

How experience gets under the skin to create gradients in developmental health.

Clyde Hertzman1, Tom Boyce.   

Abstract

Social environments and experiences get under the skin early in life in ways that affect the course of human development. Because most factors associated with early child development are a function of socio-economic status, differences in early child development form a socio-economic gradient. We are now learning how, when, and by what means early experiences influence key biological systems over the long term to produce gradients: a process known as biological embedding. Opportunities for biological embedding are tethered closely to sensitive periods in the development of neural circuitry. Epigenetic regulation is the best example of operating principles relevant to biological embedding. We are now in a position to ask how early childhood environments work together with genetic variation and epigenetic regulation to generate socially partitioned developmental trajectories with impact on health across the life course.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20070189     DOI: 10.1146/annurev.publhealth.012809.103538

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Annu Rev Public Health        ISSN: 0163-7525            Impact factor:   21.981


  180 in total

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4.  Additive contributions of childhood adversity and recent stressors to inflammation at midlife: Findings from the MIDUS study.

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5.  Rapid Infant Prefrontal Cortex Development and Sensitivity to Early Environmental Experience.

Authors:  Amanda S Hodel
Journal:  Dev Rev       Date:  2018-03-11

6.  Maternal socioeconomic disadvantage is associated with transcriptional indications of greater immune activation and slower tissue maturation in placental biopsies and newborn cord blood.

Authors:  Gregory E Miller; Ann E Borders; Amy H Crockett; Kharah M Ross; Sameen Qadir; Lauren Keenan-Devlin; Adam K Leigh; Paula Ham; Jeffrey Ma; Jesusa M G Arevalo; Linda M Ernst; Steve W Cole
Journal:  Brain Behav Immun       Date:  2017-04-21       Impact factor: 7.217

7.  Measuring early childhood health and health disparities: a new approach.

Authors:  Marianne M Hillemeier; Stephanie T Lanza; Nancy S Landale; R S Oropesa
Journal:  Matern Child Health J       Date:  2013-12

Review 8.  Protective factors for youth confronting economic hardship: Current challenges and future avenues in resilience research.

Authors:  Camelia E Hostinar; Gregory E Miller
Journal:  Am Psychol       Date:  2019-09

9.  Prepubertal children exposed to concentrated disadvantage: An exploratory analysis of inflammation and metabolic dysfunction.

Authors:  Maura Kepper; Melinda Sothern; Jovanny Zabaleta; Eric Ravussin; Cruz Velasco-Gonzalez; Claudia Leonardi; Lauren Griffiths; Chi Park; John Estrada; Richard Scribner
Journal:  Obesity (Silver Spring)       Date:  2016-03-09       Impact factor: 5.002

10.  Emotion: The Self-regulatory Sense.

Authors:  Katherine T Peil
Journal:  Glob Adv Health Med       Date:  2014-03
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