Literature DB >> 24280315

Beyond allostatic load: rethinking the role of stress in regulating human development.

Bruce J Ellis1, Marco Del Giudice2.   

Abstract

How do exposures to stress affect biobehavioral development and, through it, psychiatric and biomedical disorder? In the health sciences, the allostatic load model provides a widely accepted answer to this question: stress responses, while essential for survival, have negative long-term effects that promote illness. Thus, the benefits of mounting repeated biological responses to threat are traded off against costs to mental and physical health. The adaptive calibration model, an evolutionary-developmental theory of stress-health relations, extends this logic by conceptualizing these trade-offs as decision nodes in allocation of resources. Each decision node influences the next in a chain of resource allocations that become instantiated in the regulatory parameters of stress response systems. Over development, these parameters filter and embed information about key dimensions of environmental stress and support, mediating the organism's openness to environmental inputs, and function to regulate life history strategies to match those dimensions. Drawing on the adaptive calibration model, we propose that consideration of biological fitness trade-offs, as delineated by life history theory, is needed to more fully explain the complex relations between developmental exposures to stress, stress responsivity, behavioral strategies, and health. We conclude that the adaptive calibration model and allostatic load model are only partially complementary and, in some cases, support different approaches to intervention. In the long run, the field may be better served by a model informed by life history theory that addresses the adaptive role of stress response systems in regulating alternative developmental pathways.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 24280315     DOI: 10.1017/S0954579413000849

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Dev Psychopathol        ISSN: 0954-5794


  39 in total

Review 1.  Synthesizing Views to Understand Sex Differences in Response to Early Life Adversity.

Authors:  Kevin G Bath
Journal:  Trends Neurosci       Date:  2020-03-16       Impact factor: 13.837

2.  Early Experiences of Threat, but Not Deprivation, Are Associated With Accelerated Biological Aging in Children and Adolescents.

Authors:  Jennifer A Sumner; Natalie L Colich; Monica Uddin; Don Armstrong; Katie A McLaughlin
Journal:  Biol Psychiatry       Date:  2018-09-26       Impact factor: 13.382

3.  Approaches to modeling the development of physiological stress responsivity.

Authors:  J Benjamin Hinnant; Lauren E Philbrook; Stephen A Erath; Mona El-Sheikh
Journal:  Psychophysiology       Date:  2017-10-31       Impact factor: 4.016

4.  Allostatic Load as a Complex Clinical Construct: A Case-Based Computational Modeling Approach.

Authors:  J Galen Buckwalter; Brian Castellani; Bruce McEwen; Arun S Karlamangla; Albert A Rizzo; Bruce John; Kyle O'Donnell; Teresa Seeman
Journal:  Complexity       Date:  2015-12-23       Impact factor: 2.833

Review 5.  Evolutionary and developmental mismatches are consequences of adaptive developmental plasticity in humans and have implications for later disease risk.

Authors:  Peter D Gluckman; Mark A Hanson; Felicia M Low
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2019-04-15       Impact factor: 6.237

6.  Childhood Maltreatment and Impulsivity: A Meta-Analysis and Recommendations for Future Study.

Authors:  Richard T Liu
Journal:  J Abnorm Child Psychol       Date:  2019-02

7.  Early Caregiving and Human Biobehavioral Development: A Comparative Physiology Approach.

Authors:  Amie A Hane; Nathan A Fox
Journal:  Curr Opin Behav Sci       Date:  2016-02

Review 8.  Incorporating epigenetic mechanisms to advance fetal programming theories.

Authors:  Elisabeth Conradt; Daniel E Adkins; Sheila E Crowell; K Lee Raby; Lisa M Diamond; Bruce Ellis
Journal:  Dev Psychopathol       Date:  2018-08

9.  Childhood Family Instability and Young Adult Health.

Authors:  Lauren Gaydosh; Kathleen Mullan Harris
Journal:  J Health Soc Behav       Date:  2018-06-27

10.  Early adversity, elevated stress physiology, accelerated sexual maturation, and poor health in females.

Authors:  Jay Belsky; Paula L Ruttle; W Thomas Boyce; Jeffrey M Armstrong; Marilyn J Essex
Journal:  Dev Psychol       Date:  2015-04-27
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