4.4 Article

Social Fear in US Infants: The Roles of Hair and Salivary Cortisol

Journal

YALE JOURNAL OF BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE
Volume 95, Issue 1, Pages 71-85

Publisher

YALE J BIOLOGY MEDICINE, INC

Keywords

Infancy; hair cortisol; salivary cortisol; SES; stress; social fear

Funding

  1. NICHD [R03HD082550]

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Elevated social fear in infancy is associated with later social maladjustment and psychopathology. This study found that increased hair cortisol concentration (HCC) in infants was related to increased distress vocalizations during a Stranger Approach task, while steeper diurnal cortisol slope was associated with fewer distress vocalizations. Economic strain did not affect the relationship between cortisol measures and social fear responses.
Elevated social fear in infancy poses risk for later social maladjustment and psychopathology. Hair cortisol concentration (HCC), an index of cumulative cortisol exposure, and diurnal salivary cortisol slope, a biomarker of acute stress regulation, have been associated with social fear behaviors in childhood; however, no research has addressed their relations in infancy. Elucidating potential biomarkers of infant social fear behaviors, as well as environmental factors associated with these biomarkers, may grant insights into the ontogeny of fear behaviors that increase risk for internalizing and externalizing psychopathologies later in life. The current study used multiple linear regression to examine if infant HCC, infant diurnal cortisol slope, and income-to-needs ratios (ITN) were differentially associated with observed social fear responses to a Stranger Approach task at 12 months. Using a sample of 90 infants (M-age = 12.26m, SD = 0.81m, 50% female), results indicated that increased infant HCC was associated with increased distress vocalizations during the Stranger Approach task, while steeper diurnal cortisol slope was associated with fewer distress vocalizations. Ordinary least squares path analyses did not reveal group differences between economically strained and non-strained infants in how cortisol measures and social fear responses related. Findings underscore very early psychobiological correlates of fearfulness that may increase risk for fear-related disorders and adverse mental health symptomology across childhood.

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