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Biological perspectives on the effects of early psychosocial experience
Authors:Peter J. Marshall  Justin W. Kenney
Affiliation:aTemple University, Department of Psychology, 1701 North 13th St., Weiss Hall, Philadelphia, PA 19122, United States
Abstract:There is much current interest in how adverse experiences early in life might affect certain elements of physiological, behavioral, and psychological functioning across the lifespan. Recent conceptual frameworks for studying the effects of early experience have involved constructs such as experience-expectant, experience-dependent, and experience-adaptive plasticity. The latter construct is related to comparative models of developmental programming which posit the persistence of biological adjustments to the early caregiving environment. We briefly review such models and their translational implications. We then turn to human development and focus on the effects of large changes in children’s life courses as tests of hypotheses related to early experience effects. In particular, the effect of early institutionalization on children’s brain and behavioral development after changes to adoptive families or foster care is used as an example of a research area in which programming hypotheses have been proposed.
Keywords:Early experience   Neuroscience   Institutionalization   Development   Biology
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