4.1 Article

High levels of antenatal maternal anxiety are associated with altered cognitive control in five-year-old children

Journal

DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOBIOLOGY
Volume 54, Issue 4, Pages 441-450

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/dev.20606

Keywords

antenatal maternal anxiety; cognitive development; information processing; reaction time; intra-individual variability; pregnancy; (pre)school age

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This longitudinal prospective study examined the relation between maternal anxiety during pregnancy and specific aspects of children's cognitive functioning at age five. Antenatal maternal state-anxiety was measured around the 16th week of pregnancy. Children's neurocognitive functioning was examined using a simple reaction time (RT) task, and a choice RT task. Multiple regression analyses in the total sample (N?=?922) showed that antenatal anxiety was positively related to children's intra-individual variability in RT in the simple task. In a subsample (n?=?100) of women with state-anxiety scores above the 90th percentile, antenatal anxiety was positively associated with mean RT and intra-individual variability in RT in the incompatible trials of the choice RT task. In addition, in this subsample of highly anxious mothers we found a significant positive association in boys but not in girls, between prenatal maternal anxiety and intra-individual variability in RT in the simple task. (c) 2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Dev Psychobiol 54:441450, 2012.

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