4.5 Article

Differential Associations of Deprivation and Threat With Cognitive Control and Fear Conditioning in Early Childhood

期刊

出版社

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fnbeh.2019.00080

关键词

deprivation; threat; cognitive control; fear conditioning; physiological reactivity

资金

  1. National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences through a pilot TraCS grant [UL1TR002489, 2KR831605]
  2. National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship [DGE-1144081]
  3. Center for Developmental Science, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill [5T32HD07376-29]
  4. National Institutes of Health K01 [MH116325]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Early-life adversity (ELA) is strongly associated with risk for psychopathology. Within adversity, deprivation, and threat may lead to psychopathology through different intermediary pathways. Specifically, deprivation, defined as the absence of expected cognitive and social inputs, is associated with lower performance on complex cognitive tasks whereas threatening experiences, defined as the presence of experiences that reflect harm to the child, are associated with atypical fear learning and emotional processes. However, distinct associations of deprivation and threat on behavioral outcomes have not been examined in early childhood. The present study examines how deprivation and threat are associated with cognitive and emotional outcomes in early childhood. Children 4-7 years old completed behavioral tasks assessing cognitive control (N = 58) and fear conditioning (N = 45); deprivation and threat were assessed using child interview and parent questionnaires. Regression analyses were performed including deprivation and threat scores and controls for age, gender, and IQ. Because this is the first time these variables have been examined in early childhood, interactions with age were also examined. Deprivation, but not threat was associated with worse performance on the cognitive control task. Threat, but not deprivation interacted with age to predict fear learning. Young children who experienced high levels of threat showed evidence of fear learning measured by differential skin conductance response even at the earliest age measured. In contrast, for children not exposed to threat, fear learning emerged only in older ages. Children who experienced higher levels of threat also showed blunted reactivity measured by amplitude of skin conductance response to the reinforced stimuli regardless of age. Results suggest differential influences of deprivation and threat on cognitive and emotional outcomes even in early childhood. Future work should examine the neural mechanisms underlying these behavioral changes and link changes with increased risk for negative outcomes associated with adversity exposure, such as psychopathology.

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