512 results on '"Boyce W"'
Search Results
2. Change of pace: How developmental tempo varies to accommodate failed provision of early needs
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Roubinov, Danielle, Meaney, Michael J, and Boyce, W Thomas
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Health Sciences ,Pediatric Research Initiative ,Pediatric ,Generic health relevance ,Developmental acceleration and deceleration ,HPA axis ,Adversity ,Gene x environment ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Behavioral Science & Comparative Psychology ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
The interplay of genes and environments (GxE) is a fundamental source of variation in behavioral and developmental outcomes. Although the role of developmental time (T) in the unfolding of such interactions has yet to be fully considered, GxE operates within a temporal frame of reference across multiple timescales and degrees of biological complexity. Here, we consider GxExT interactions to understand adversity-induced developmental acceleration or deceleration whereby environmental conditions hasten or hinder children's development. To date, developmental pace changes have been largely explained through a focus on the individual: for example, how adversity "wears down" aging biological systems or how adversity accelerates or decelerates maturation to optimize reproductive fitness. We broaden such theories by positing shifts in developmental pace in response to the parent-child dyad's capacity or incapacity for meeting children's early, physiological and safety needs. We describe empirical evidence and potential neurobiological mechanisms supporting this new conceptualization of developmental acceleration and deceleration. We conclude with suggestions for future research on the developmental consequences of early adverse exposures.
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- 2021
3. Optimality and limitations of audio-visual integration for cognitive systems
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Boyce, W. Paul, Lindsay, Tony, Zgonnikov, Arkady, Rano, Ignacio, and Wong-Lin, KongFatt
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Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence ,Computer Science - Human-Computer Interaction ,Quantitative Biology - Neurons and Cognition - Abstract
Multimodal integration is an important process in perceptual decision-making. In humans, this process has often been shown to be statistically optimal, or near optimal: sensory information is combined in a fashion that minimises the average error in perceptual representation of stimuli. However, sometimes there are costs that come with the optimization, manifesting as illusory percepts. We review audio-visual facilitations and illusions that are products of multisensory integration, and the computational models that account for these phenomena. In particular, the same optimal computational model can lead to illusory percepts, and we suggest that more studies should be needed to detect and mitigate these illusions, as artefacts in artificial cognitive systems. We provide cautionary considerations when designing artificial cognitive systems with the view of avoiding such artefacts. Finally, we suggest avenues of research towards solutions to potential pitfalls in system design. We conclude that detailed understanding of multisensory integration and the mechanisms behind audio-visual illusions can benefit the design of artificial cognitive systems., Comment: 20 pages, 6 figures, 1 table 16/06/2020: Updated version includes expanded discussion and addition of new references. Also updated author affiliation information. This version has been accepted for publication with Frontiers
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- 2019
4. Externalizing and Internalizing Problems: Associations with Family Adversity and Young Children’s Adrenocortical and Autonomic Functioning
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Goulter, Natalie, Roubinov, Danielle S, McMahon, Robert J, Boyce, W Thomas, and Bush, Nicole R
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Psychology ,Applied and Developmental Psychology ,Neurosciences ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Clinical Research ,Pediatric ,Youth Violence ,Violence Research ,Mental Health ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Aetiology ,2.3 Psychological ,social and economic factors ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Humans ,Hydrocortisone ,Hypothalamo-Hypophyseal System ,Male ,Parasympathetic Nervous System ,Pituitary-Adrenal System ,Respiratory Sinus Arrhythmia ,Adversity ,Cortisol ,Respiratory sinus arrhythmia ,Externalizing ,Internalizing ,Developmental & Child Psychology ,Applied and developmental psychology ,Clinical and health psychology ,Social and personality psychology - Abstract
The development of child mental health problems has been associated with experiences of adversity and dysregulation of stress response systems; however, past research has largely focused on externalizing or internalizing problems (rather than their co-occurrence) and single physiological systems in high-risk adolescent samples. The present study examined whether cumulative family adversity, functioning in the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis (i.e., cortisol) and the parasympathetic nervous system (i.e., respiratory sinus arrhythmia [RSA]), and their interactions, predicted trajectories of co-occurring externalizing and internalizing problems among young children. Participants included 338 socioeconomically and racially diverse children (M age = 5.32 years, SD = .32; male = 51.8%) from a community sample. Family adversity (assessed with six measures) and child daily cortisol output and resting RSA were assessed in kindergarten. Parents, teachers, and children reported on children's externalizing and internalizing psychopathology up to three times from kindergarten to grade 1. Latent class growth analyses identified stable trajectories of externalizing and internalizing psychopathology. Trajectories were combined to create groups: co-occurring externalizing and internalizing (13.1%), externalizing-only (14.0%), internalizing-only (11.3%), and low problems (61.3%). Family adversity and resting RSA significantly positively predicted co-occurring group membership. Tests for interactions showed adversity did not significantly interact with physiological indicators to predict group membership. However, the two physiological systems interacted, such that higher and lower daily cortisol predicted internalizing group membership for children with lower and higher resting RSA, respectively. Findings support the importance of considering family context and multiple physiological systems to inform understanding of the development of mental health problems, and their co-occurrence, in early childhood.
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- 2021
5. Maternal Stress During Pregnancy Predicts Infant Infectious and Noninfectious Illness
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Bush, Nicole R, Savitz, Jennifer, Coccia, Michael, Jones-Mason, Karen, Adler, Nancy, Boyce, W Thomas, Laraia, Barbara, and Epel, Elissa
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Reproductive Medicine ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Maternal Health ,Prevention ,Pediatric ,Mental Health ,Pregnancy ,Depression ,Brain Disorders ,Mental Illness ,Perinatal Period - Conditions Originating in Perinatal Period ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Women's Health ,Reproductive health and childbirth ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Female ,Humans ,Incidence ,Infant ,Newborn ,Infant ,Newborn ,Diseases ,Infections ,Middle Aged ,Postpartum Period ,Pregnancy Complications ,Retrospective Studies ,Stress ,Psychological ,United States ,Young Adult ,HPA axis ,atopy ,developmental origins of health and disease ,fetal programming ,illness ,immune system ,infant ,infectious illness ,maternal stress ,prenatal programming ,Human Movement and Sports Sciences ,Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine ,Pediatrics ,Paediatrics - Abstract
ObjectivesTo examine the association between prenatal stress and infant physical health in the first year of life within an understudied, racially and ethnically diverse, highly stressed community sample. We expected that greater stress exposure would predict higher rates of infant illness.Study designLow-income, racially/ethnically diverse, overweight women with low medical risk pregnancies were recruited (2011-2014) during pregnancy. Pregnancy Stressful Life Events were assessed retrospectively (mean, 11.88 months postpartum). Perceived stress was assessed twice during pregnancy (at a mean of 17.4 weeks and again at a mean of 25.6 weeks) and at 6 months postpartum. Women with live births (n = 202) were invited; 162 consented to the offspring study. Medical records from pediatric clinics and emergency departments for 148 infants were abstracted for counts of total infectious illnesses, total noninfectious illness, and diversity of illnesses over the first year of life.ResultsThe final analytic sample included 109 women (mean age, 28.08 years) and their infants. In covariate-adjusted negative binomial models, maternal perceptions of stress across pregnancy were positively associated with infant illness. Each 1-point increase in average stress was associated with a 38% increase in incidence of infant infections (Incidence rate ratio, 1.38; 95% CI, 1.01-1.88; P
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- 2021
6. Associations between multisystem stress reactivity and peer nominated aggression in early childhood vary by sex.
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Hagan, Melissa, Roubinov, Danielle, Boyce, W, and Bush, Nicole
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cortisol reactivity ,early childhood ,peer-directed aggression ,sympathetic reactivity ,Aggression ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Female ,Humans ,Hydrocortisone ,Hypothalamo-Hypophyseal System ,Male ,Pituitary-Adrenal System ,Saliva ,Stress ,Psychological - Abstract
There is emerging evidence that the development of problematic aggression in childhood may be associated with specific physiological stress response patterns, with both biological overactivation and underactivation implicated. This study tested associations between sex-specific patterns of stress responses across the sympathetic nervous system (SNS) and hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis and peer nominations of aggression among 271 kindergarten children (Mean age = 5.32 years; 52% Female; 44% White). Upon entry to kindergarten, children participated in a multidomain standardized stress paradigm. Changes in pre-ejection period (PEP) and salivary cortisol were assessed. On a separate day, children provided peer ratings of physical and relational aggression in a standardized interview. As expected, there was a significant three-way interaction between PEP, cortisol reactivity, and sex, but only for physical aggression. Among boys, cortisol reactivity was positively associated with physical aggression only for those with higher SNS reactivity. Findings suggest that for boys, asymmetrical and symmetrical HPA/SNS reactivity may be associated with lower and higher risk for peer-directed physical aggression, respectively. Understanding the complex associations between multisystem physiology, child sex and peer-directed aggression in early childhood may offer insight into individual differences underlying the emergence of behavioral dysregulation in early peer contexts.
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- 2020
7. The PedBE clock accurately estimates DNA methylation age in pediatric buccal cells.
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McEwen, Lisa M, O'Donnell, Kieran J, McGill, Megan G, Edgar, Rachel D, Jones, Meaghan J, MacIsaac, Julia L, Lin, David Tse Shen, Ramadori, Katia, Morin, Alexander, Gladish, Nicole, Garg, Elika, Unternaehrer, Eva, Pokhvisneva, Irina, Karnani, Neerja, Kee, Michelle ZL, Klengel, Torsten, Adler, Nancy E, Barr, Ronald G, Letourneau, Nicole, Giesbrecht, Gerald F, Reynolds, James N, Czamara, Darina, Armstrong, Jeffrey M, Essex, Marilyn J, de Weerth, Carolina, Beijers, Roseriet, Tollenaar, Marieke S, Bradley, Bekh, Jovanovic, Tanja, Ressler, Kerry J, Steiner, Meir, Entringer, Sonja, Wadhwa, Pathik D, Buss, Claudia, Bush, Nicole R, Binder, Elisabeth B, Boyce, W Thomas, Meaney, Michael J, Horvath, Steve, and Kobor, Michael S
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Mouth Mucosa ,Epithelial Cells ,Humans ,Cohort Studies ,Longitudinal Studies ,Epigenesis ,Genetic ,CpG Islands ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Infant ,Female ,Male ,Young Adult ,Epigenomics ,DNA methylation ,adolescence ,age ,development ,epigenetic clock ,Human Genome ,Genetics ,Pediatric ,Underpinning research ,1.1 Normal biological development and functioning ,Generic health relevance ,Good Health and Well Being - Abstract
The development of biological markers of aging has primarily focused on adult samples. Epigenetic clocks are a promising tool for measuring biological age that show impressive accuracy across most tissues and age ranges. In adults, deviations from the DNA methylation (DNAm) age prediction are correlated with several age-related phenotypes, such as mortality and frailty. In children, however, fewer such associations have been made, possibly because DNAm changes are more dynamic in pediatric populations as compared to adults. To address this gap, we aimed to develop a highly accurate, noninvasive, biological measure of age specific to pediatric samples using buccal epithelial cell DNAm. We gathered 1,721 genome-wide DNAm profiles from 11 different cohorts of typically developing individuals aged 0 to 20 y old. Elastic net penalized regression was used to select 94 CpG sites from a training dataset (n = 1,032), with performance assessed in a separate test dataset (n = 689). DNAm at these 94 CpG sites was highly predictive of age in the test cohort (median absolute error = 0.35 y). The Pediatric-Buccal-Epigenetic (PedBE) clock was characterized in additional cohorts, showcasing the accuracy in longitudinal data, the performance in nonbuccal tissues and adult age ranges, and the association with obstetric outcomes. The PedBE tool for measuring biological age in children might help in understanding the environmental and contextual factors that shape the DNA methylome during child development, and how it, in turn, might relate to child health and disease.
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- 2020
8. Associations between classroom climate and children's externalizing symptoms: The moderating effect of kindergarten children's parasympathetic reactivity
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Roubinov, Danielle S, Bush, Nicole R, Hagan, Melissa J, Thompson, Jason, and Boyce, W Thomas
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Psychology ,Applied and Developmental Psychology ,Pediatric ,Clinical Research ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Child ,Female ,Humans ,Individuality ,Male ,Respiratory Sinus Arrhythmia ,Schools ,autonomic nervous system ,classroom climate ,externalizing ,parasympathetic reactivity ,Cognitive Sciences ,Developmental & Child Psychology ,Applied and developmental psychology ,Biological psychology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
Classrooms are key social settings that impact children's mental health, though individual differences in physiological reactivity may render children more or less susceptible to classroom environments. In a diverse sample of children from 19 kindergarten classrooms (N = 338, 48% female, M age = 5.32 years), we examined whether children's parasympathetic reactivity moderated the association between classroom climate and externalizing symptoms. Independent observers coded teachers' use of child-centered and teacher-directed instructional practices across classroom social and management domains. Children's respiratory sinus arrhythmia reactivity to challenge tasks was assessed in fall and a multi-informant measure of externalizing was collected in fall and spring. Both the social and the management domains of classroom climate significantly interacted with children's respiratory sinus arrhythmia reactivity to predict spring externalizing symptoms, controlling for fall symptoms. For more reactive children, as classrooms shifted toward greater proportional use of child-centered methods, externalizing symptoms declined, whereas greater use of teacher-dominated practices was associated with increased symptoms. Conversely, among less reactive children, exposure to more teacher-dominated classroom management practices was associated with lower externalizing. Consistent with the theory of biological sensitivity to context, considering variability in children's physiological reactivity aids understanding of the salience of the classroom environment for children's mental health.
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- 2020
9. Informant-specific reports of peer and teacher relationships buffer the effects of harsh parenting on children's oppositional defiant disorder during kindergarten
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Roubinov, Danielle S, Boyce, W Thomas, and Bush, Nicole R
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Social and Personality Psychology ,Psychology ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Clinical Research ,Violence Research ,Mental Health ,Youth Violence ,Pediatric ,Attention Deficit and Disruptive Behavior Disorders ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Female ,Humans ,Interpersonal Relations ,Male ,Parenting ,Peer Group ,School Teachers ,Schools ,externalizing behavior ,parenting ,peer relationship ,teacher-child relationship ,teacher–child relationship ,Cognitive Sciences ,Developmental & Child Psychology ,Applied and developmental psychology ,Biological psychology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
Harsh and restrictive parenting are well-established contributors to the development of oppositional defiant disorder (ODD) among children. However, few studies have explored whether interpersonal relationships that develop outside the family environment attenuate the risk for ODD that is associated with harsh parenting. The current study tested multireporter measures of teacher-child closeness and peer acceptance as moderators of the association between harsh parenting and children's ODD as children's social worlds widen during the kindergarten year (N = 338 children, 48% girls, M age = 5.32 years). Harsh parenting interacted with peer nominations of peer acceptance and children's report of teacher-child closeness to predict children's ODD symptoms in the spring, adjusting for fall symptoms. Children exposed to harsh parenting exhibited greater symptom increases when they were less liked/accepted playmates and in the context of lower teacher-child closeness. However, harsh parenting was not associated with symptom change among children with higher levels of peer-nominated acceptance and those who reported closer relationships with teachers. There were no significant interactions using teacher's report of peer acceptance or teacher's report of teacher-child closeness. Findings highlight positive peer and teacher relationships as promising targets of intervention among children exposed to harsh parenting and support the importance of assessing multiple perspectives of children's social functioning.
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- 2020
10. Differences in Febrile and Respiratory Illnesses in Minority Children: The Sociodemographic Context of Restrictive Parenting
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Roubinov, Danielle S, Bush, Nicole R, Adler, Nancy E, and Boyce, W Thomas
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Paediatrics ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Pediatric ,Child ,Ethnicity ,Female ,Fever ,Humans ,Male ,Minority Groups ,Parenting ,Respiratory Tract Diseases ,Social Class ,White People ,child ,ethnicity ,parenting ,physical health ,socioeconomic status ,Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine ,Pediatrics - Abstract
ObjectiveTo examine the moderating role of restrictive parenting on the relation of socioeconomic status (SES) to febrile illnesses (FIs) and upper respiratory illnesses (URIs) among ethnic minority and non-minority children.MethodsChildren from diverse ethnic backgrounds (Caucasian, African American, Asian, Latino, other, or multiethnic) were followed across the course of the kindergarten year. Parents reported on SES and parenting. A nurse completed 13 physical exams per child over the year to assess FIs and URIs.ResultsDuring the school year, 28% of children (n = 199, 56% ethnic minority) exhibited one or more FIs (range, 0-6) and 90% exhibited one or more URIs (range, 0-10). No main or moderating effects of SES or restrictive parenting on FIs or URIs were found among Caucasian children; however, among ethnic minority children, the relation of SES to FIs was conditional upon restrictive parenting (β = .66; P = .02), as the fewest FIs were found for lower SES minority children whose parents reported more restrictive practices. Additionally, among minority children, more restrictive parenting was marginally associated with fewer URIs (β = -.21; P = .05).ConclusionsUnexpectedly, among minority children the fewest illnesses occurred among lower SES children whose parents endorsed more restrictive parenting. This may be due to unique appraisals of this rearing style among minority children in lower SES environments and its potential to influence immune functioning. Results suggest variability in the effects of parenting on offspring health and support context-specific evaluations of parenting in efforts to ameliorate early health disparities.
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- 2019
11. Children's biobehavioral reactivity to challenge predicts DNA methylation in adolescence and emerging adulthood
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Goodman, Sarah J, Roubinov, Danielle S, Bush, Nicole R, Park, Mina, Farré, Pau, Emberly, Eldon, Hertzman, Clyde, Essex, Marilyn J, Kobor, Michael S, and Boyce, W Thomas
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Clinical Research ,Mental Health ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Prevention ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Genetics ,Pediatric ,Aetiology ,4.1 Discovery and preclinical testing of markers and technologies ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,2.3 Psychological ,social and economic factors ,Detection ,screening and diagnosis ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Child ,Child Behavior ,Child ,Preschool ,DNA Methylation ,Epigenesis ,Genetic ,Female ,Homeodomain Proteins ,Humans ,Inhibition ,Psychological ,Insulin-Like Growth Factor II ,Male ,Mental Disorders ,Principal Component Analysis ,Temperament ,Transcription Factors ,Psychology ,Cognitive Sciences ,Linguistics ,Developmental & Child Psychology - Abstract
A growing body of research has documented associations between adverse childhood environments and DNA methylation, highlighting epigenetic processes as potential mechanisms through which early external contexts influence health across the life course. The present study tested a complementary hypothesis: indicators of children's early internal, biological, and behavioral responses to stressful challenges may also be linked to stable patterns of DNA methylation later in life. Children's autonomic nervous system reactivity, temperament, and mental health symptoms were prospectively assessed from infancy through early childhood, and principal components analysis (PCA) was applied to derive composites of biological and behavioral reactivity. Buccal epithelial cells were collected from participants at 15 and 18 years of age. Findings revealed an association between early life biobehavioral inhibition/disinhibition and DNA methylation across many genes. Notably, reactive, inhibited children were found to have decreased DNA methylation of the DLX5 and IGF2 genes at both time points, as compared to non-reactive, disinhibited children. Results of the present study are provisional but suggest that the gene's profile of DNA methylation may constitute a biomarker of normative or potentially pathological differences in reactivity. Overall, findings provide a foundation for future research to explore relations among epigenetic processes and differences in both individual-level biobehavioral risk and qualities of the early, external childhood environment.
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- 2019
12. The biological embedding of early-life socioeconomic status and family adversity in children's genome-wide DNA methylation
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Bush, Nicole R, Edgar, Rachel D, Park, Mina, MacIsaac, Julia L, McEwen, Lisa M, Adler, Nancy E, Essex, Marilyn J, Kobor, Michael S, and Boyce, W Thomas
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Biological Sciences ,Genetics ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Pediatric Research Initiative ,Pediatric ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Prevention ,Human Genome ,Generic health relevance ,Adverse Childhood Experiences ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,CpG Islands ,DNA Methylation ,Female ,Genome ,Human ,Humans ,Male ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Clinical Sciences - Abstract
AimTo examine variation in child DNA methylation to assess its potential as a pathway for effects of childhood social adversity on health across the life course.Materials & methodsIn a diverse, prospective community sample of 178 kindergarten children, associations between three types of social experience and DNA methylation within buccal epithelial cells later in childhood were examined.ResultsFamily income, parental education and family psychosocial adversity each associated with increased or decreased DNA methylation (488, 354 and 102 sites, respectively) within a unique set of genomic CpG sites. Gene ontology analyses pointed to genes serving immune and developmental regulation functions.ConclusionFindings provided support for DNA methylation as a biomarker linking early-life social experiences with later life health in humans.
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- 2018
13. Family Socioeconomic Status, Cortisol, and Physical Health in Early Childhood
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Roubinov, Danielle S, Hagan, Melissa J, Boyce, W Thomas, Adler, Nancy E, and Bush, Nicole R
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Pediatric ,Prevention ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Child ,Child Development ,Child ,Preschool ,Family ,Female ,Follow-Up Studies ,Health Status ,Humans ,Hydrocortisone ,Male ,Residence Characteristics ,Saliva ,Social Class ,cortisol ,neighborhood quality ,physical health ,socioeconomic status ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Psychiatry - Abstract
OBJECTIVE:Children from families with lower socioeconomic status (SES) evidence greater physiological dysregulation and poorer health. Despite recognition of environmental contributors, little is known about the influence of neighborhood characteristics. The present study examined the moderating role of community-level risks and resources on the relation of family SES to children's daily cortisol output and physical health during the kindergarten year. METHODS:In fall and spring of kindergarten, children's (N = 338) daily total cortisol was measured and parents and teachers rated children's global physical health. Parents reported family SES. Neighborhood characteristics were assessed using the Child Opportunity Index, a population-level tool that evaluates the quality of multiple domains of neighborhood attributes. RESULTS:In fall, children reared in lower SES family environments had higher cortisol when residing in lower quality (lower opportunity) neighborhoods (b = -.097, p < .001), but there was no relation between family SES and children's cortisol in more advantaged (higher opportunity) neighborhoods (b = -.023, p = .36). Lower family SES was prospectively associated with poorer physical health in spring (controlling for fall health) only among children living in lower opportunity neighborhoods (b = -.250, p = .018) and was unrelated to physical health among children residing in higher opportunity neighborhoods (b = .042, p = .70). CONCLUSIONS:Higher opportunity neighborhoods may protect against the negative consequences of low family SES on children's stress physiology and physical health. Public health interventions that bolster neighborhood opportunities may benefit young children reared in socioeconomically disadvantaged family environments.
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- 2018
14. Child temperament and teacher relationship interactively predict cortisol expression: The prism of classroom climate
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Roubinov, Danielle S, Hagan, Melissa J, Boyce, W Thomas, Essex, Marilyn J, and Bush, Nicole R
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Social and Personality Psychology ,Psychology ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Pediatric ,Mental Health ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Female ,Humans ,Hydrocortisone ,Interpersonal Relations ,Longitudinal Studies ,Male ,Motivation ,Saliva ,School Teachers ,Schools ,Social Adjustment ,Social Environment ,Temperament ,Cognitive Sciences ,Developmental & Child Psychology ,Applied and developmental psychology ,Biological psychology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
Entry into kindergarten is a developmental milestone that children may differentially experience as stressful, with implications for variability in neurobiological functioning. Guided by the goodness-of-fit framework, this study tested the hypothesis that kindergarten children's (N = 338) daily cortisol would be affected by the "match" or "mismatch" between children's temperament and qualities of the classroom relational context. The robustness of these associations was also explored among a separate sample of children in third grade (N = 165). Results among kindergarten children showed negative affectivity and overcontrolled temperament were positively related to cortisol expression within classrooms characterized by lower levels of teacher motivational support, but there was no relation between temperament and cortisol when motivational support was higher. Among third-grade children, negative affectivity was marginally positively related to cortisol at lower levels of teacher-child closeness and unrelated at higher levels of teacher-child closeness. Findings suggest children's cortisol expression depends on the extent to which specific temperamental characteristics "fit" within the relational and contextual qualities of the classroom environment, particularly as children navigate the new roles and relationships that emerge during the transition to formal schooling. Developmentally informed neurobiological research in classrooms may contribute to tailored programmatic efforts to support children's school adjustment.
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- 2017
15. Effect of spatial context on perceived walking direction
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Chen, Chang, primary, Boyce, W. Paul, additional, Palmer, Colin J., additional, and Clifford, Colin W. G., additional
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- 2024
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16. Genes and environments, development and time
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Boyce, W. Thomas, Sokolowski, Marla B., and Robinson, Gene E.
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- 2020
17. Children's autonomic nervous system reactivity moderates the relations between family adversity and sleep problems in Latino five-year olds in the CHAMACOS study
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Alkon, Abbey, Boyce, W. Thomas, Neilands, Torsten B, and Eskenazi, Brenda
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- 2017
18. Children's Autonomic Nervous System Reactivity Moderates the Relations between Family Adversity and Sleep Problems in Latino 5-Year Olds in the CHAMACOS Study
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Alkon, Abbey, Boyce, W. Thomas, Neilands, Torsten B, and Eskenazi, Brenda
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- 2017
19. Layered Social Network Analysis Reveals Complex Relationships in Kindergarteners
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Golemiec, Mireille, Schneider, Jonathan, Boyce, W Thomas, Bush, Nicole R, Adler, Nancy, and Levine, Joel D
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Psychology ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,hierarchy ,social ,kindergarten children ,social structure ,layered networks ,motifs ,Cognitive Sciences ,Biomedical and clinical sciences - Abstract
The interplay between individuals forms building blocks for social structure. Here, we examine the structure of behavioral interactions among kindergarten classroom with a hierarchy-neutral approach to examine all possible underlying patterns in the formation of layered networks of "reciprocal" interactions. To understand how these layers are coordinated, we used a layered motif approach. Our dual layered motif analysis can therefore be thought of as the dynamics of smaller groups that tile to create the group structure, or alternatively they provide information on what the average child would do in a given local social environment. When we examine the regulated motifs in layered networks, we find that transitivity is at least partially involved in the formation of these layered network structures. We also found complex combinations of the expected reciprocal interactions. The mechanisms used to understand social networks of kindergarten children here are also applicable on a more general scale to any group of individuals where interactions and identities can be readily observed and scored.
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- 2016
20. The impact of maternal depression and overcrowded housing on associations between autonomic nervous system reactivity and externalizing behavior problems in vulnerable Latino children
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Waters, Sara F, Boyce, W Thomas, Eskenazi, Brenda, and Alkon, Abbey
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Psychology ,Applied and Developmental Psychology ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Mental Health ,Neurosciences ,Mind and Body ,Depression ,Violence Research ,Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Pediatric ,Aetiology ,2.3 Psychological ,social and economic factors ,Mental health ,Adult ,California ,Child ,Child Behavior ,Crowding ,Emigrants and Immigrants ,Female ,Hispanic or Latino ,Housing ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Male ,Mothers ,Poverty ,Problem Behavior ,Risk ,Sympathetic Nervous System ,Latino ,Autonomic nervous system ,Externalizing behavior problems ,Maternal depression ,Overcrowding ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Experimental Psychology ,Biological sciences ,Biomedical and clinical sciences - Abstract
The study of autonomic nervous system responses and contextual factors has shed light on the development of children's negative outcomes, but the majority of these studies have not focused on minority populations living under adversity. To address these gaps, the current longitudinal study included a sample of poor, immigrant Latino families to examine whether associations between children's autonomic nervous system reactivity at 6 months and their externalizing behavior problems at 7 years of age were moderated by two risk factors associated with poverty: the interpersonal factor of chronic maternal depression and the environmental factor of chronic overcrowded housing. Multiple linear regression (N = 99) revealed that children who exhibited less parasympathetic nervous system withdrawal in response to challenge during infancy had more externalizing problems during childhood only if they had mothers who experienced chronic depression. Children who exhibited greater sympathetic nervous system reactivity during infancy had the lowest levels of externalizing problems during childhood only if they had mothers who chronic depression. Chronic overcrowded housing did not moderate associations between physiological reactivity and level of externalizing problems. These findings extend our understanding of the interaction of physiology and context on child outcomes to the understudied population of impoverished Latino families.
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- 2016
21. Impact of parental multiple sclerosis on early childhood development: A retrospective cohort study
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Razaz, Neda, Tremlett, Helen, Boyce, W Thomas, Guhn, Martin, Joseph, KS, and Marrie, Ruth Ann
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Neurosciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Mental Health ,Clinical Research ,Neurodegenerative ,Brain Disorders ,Autoimmune Disease ,Prevention ,Pediatric ,Multiple Sclerosis ,Aetiology ,2.3 Psychological ,social and economic factors ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Child Development ,Child ,Preschool ,Chronic Disease ,Cohort Studies ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Parents ,Retrospective Studies ,Child development ,administrative databases ,child of impaired parents ,developmental outcomes ,multiple sclerosis ,parental chronic illness ,population-based studies ,Neurology & Neurosurgery ,Clinical sciences ,Biological psychology - Abstract
BackgroundExposure to parental chronic illness is associated with several adverse developmental outcomes.ObjectivesWe examined the association between parental multiple sclerosis (MS) and childhood developmental outcomes.MethodsWe conducted a population-based retrospective cohort study in Manitoba, Canada, using linked databases. The outcome was childhood development at 5 years of age, expressed as vulnerability (absent vs. present) on the Early Development Instrument (EDI). Logistic regression was used to estimate odds ratios (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI).ResultsChildren with an MS parent (n=153) were similar to children of unaffected parents (n=876) on all EDI domains. However, mental health morbidity was more common among MS parents compared with non-MS parents 49.5% vs. 35.3%. Among MS parents, mental health morbidity was associated with children's vulnerability on the social competence (OR, 5.73 [95% CI:1.11-29.58]) and emotional maturity (OR, 3.03 [95% CI:1.03-8.94]) domains. The duration of child's exposure to parental MS was associated with vulnerability on the physical health domain (OR, 1.49 [95%CI:1.03-2.15]).ConclusionParental MS was not associated with adverse early childhood developmental outcomes. However, children of parents with mental health morbidity, and those with longer duration of exposure to parental MS, were at higher risk for early childhood developmental vulnerability.
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- 2015
22. Early Adversity, Elevated Stress Physiology, Accelerated Sexual Maturation, and Poor Health in Females
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Belsky, Jay, Ruttle, Paula L, Boyce, W Thomas, Armstrong, Jeffrey M, and Essex, Marilyn J
- Subjects
Clinical and Health Psychology ,Psychology ,Mental Health ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Pediatric ,Depression ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,2.3 Psychological ,social and economic factors ,Aetiology ,Mental health ,Generic health relevance ,Reproductive health and childbirth ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Adrenarche ,Adult ,Child ,Female ,Health Status ,Humans ,Hydrocortisone ,Life Change Events ,Longitudinal Studies ,Parenting ,Pregnancy ,Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects ,Puberty ,Precocious ,Sexual Maturation ,Stress ,Psychological ,Young Adult ,predictive adaptive response ,developmental origins of health and disease ,adrenarche ,prenatal stress ,stress physiology ,Specialist Studies in Education ,Cognitive Sciences ,Developmental & Child Psychology ,Specialist studies in education ,Applied and developmental psychology ,Cognitive and computational psychology - Abstract
Evolutionary-minded developmentalists studying predictive-adaptive-response processes linking childhood adversity with accelerated female reproductive development and health scientists investigating the developmental origins of health and disease (DOoHaD) may be tapping the same process, whereby longer-term health costs are traded off for increased probability of reproducing before dying via a process of accelerated reproductive maturation. Using data from 73 females, we test the following propositions using path analysis: (a) greater exposure to prenatal stress predicts greater maternal depression and negative parenting in infancy, (b) which predicts elevated basal cortisol at 4.5 years, (c) which predicts accelerated adrenarcheal development, (d) which predicts more physical and mental health problems at age 18. Results prove generally consistent with these propositions, including a direct link from cortisol to mental health problems. DOoHaD investigators should consider including early sexual maturation as a core component linking early adversity and stress physiology with poor health later in life in females.
- Published
- 2015
23. Fostering Early Brain Development
- Author
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Boyce, W Thomas
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Health Sciences ,Brain ,Female ,Foster Home Care ,Humans ,Institutionalization ,Male ,White Matter ,Medical and Health Sciences ,General & Internal Medicine ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Published
- 2015
24. Social dominance, school bullying, and child health: what are our ethical obligations to the very young?
- Author
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Halpern, Jodi, Jutte, Douglas, Colby, Jackie, and Boyce, W Thomas
- Subjects
Humans ,Social Dominance ,Parents ,Social Justice ,Child Welfare ,Bioethics ,Social Responsibility ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Female ,Male ,Bullying ,bullying ,ethics ,social dominance ,social justice ,stress ,Preschool ,Pediatric ,Mental Health ,Ethics ,Social dominance ,Social justice ,Stress ,Pediatrics ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences - Abstract
BackgroundRecent research shows that by age 5, children form rigid social hierarchies, with some children consistently subordinated, and then later, bullied. Further, several studies suggest that enduring mental and physical harm follow. It is time to analyze the health burdens posed by early social dominance and to consider the ethical implications of ongoing socially caused harms.MethodsFirst, we reviewed research demonstrating the health impact of early childhood subordination. Second, we used philosophical conceptions of children's rights and social justice to consider whether children have a right to protection and who has an obligation to protect them from social harms.ResultsCollectively, recent studies show that early subordination is instantiated biologically, increasing lifetime physical and mental health problems. The pervasive, and enduring nature of these harms leads us to argue that children have a right to be protected. Further, society has a role responsibility to protect children because society conscripts children into schools. Society's promise to parents that schools will be fiduciaries entails an obligation to safeguard each child's right to a reasonably open future. Importantly, this role responsibility holds independently of bearing any causal responsibility for the harm. This new argument based on protecting from harm is much stronger than previous equality of opportunity arguments, and applies broadly to other social determinants of health.ConclusionsSocial institutions have a role responsibility to protect children that is not dependent on playing a causal role in the harm. Children's rights to protection from social harms can be as strong as their rights to protection from direct bodily harms.
- Published
- 2015
25. Development and the epigenome: the ‘synapse’ of gene–environment interplay
- Author
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Boyce, W Thomas and Kobor, Michael S
- Subjects
Biological Psychology ,Cognitive and Computational Psychology ,Psychology ,Applied and Developmental Psychology ,Human Genome ,Stem Cell Research - Nonembryonic - Non-Human ,Stem Cell Research ,Genetics ,Underpinning research ,1.1 Normal biological development and functioning ,Generic health relevance ,Good Health and Well Being ,Animals ,Developmental Biology ,Epigenesis ,Genetic ,Gene-Environment Interaction ,Humans ,Synapses ,Cognitive Sciences ,Linguistics ,Developmental & Child Psychology ,Applied and developmental psychology ,Biological psychology ,Cognitive and computational psychology - Abstract
This paper argues that there is a revolution afoot in the developmental science of gene-environment interplay. We summarize, for an audience of developmental researchers and clinicians, how epigenetic processes - chromatin structural modifications that regulate gene expression without changing DNA sequences - may offer a strong, parsimonious account for the convergence of genetic and contextual variation in the genesis of adaptive and maladaptive development. Epigenetic processes may play a plausible explanatory role in understanding: divergent trajectories and sexual dimorphisms in brain development; statistical interactions between genes and environments; the biological embedding of early psychosocial adversities; the linkages of such adversities to disorders of mental health; the striking individual variation in the strength of those linkages; the molecular origins of critical and sensitive periods; and the transgenerational inheritance of risk and protection. Taken together, these arguments converge in a claim that epigenetic processes constitute a promising and illuminating point of connection - a 'synapse' - between genes and environments.
- Published
- 2015
26. Early Childhood Health and the Life Course: The State of the Science and Proposed Research Priorities : A Background Paper for the MCH Life Course Research Network
- Author
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Thomas Boyce, W., Hertzman, Clyde, Halfon, Neal, editor, Forrest, Christopher B., editor, Lerner, Richard M., editor, and Faustman, Elaine M., editor
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. The symphonic structure of childhood stress reactivity: patterns of sympathetic, parasympathetic, and adrenocortical responses to psychological challenge.
- Author
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Quas, Jodi A, Yim, Ilona S, Oberlander, Tim F, Nordstokke, David, Essex, Marilyn J, Armstrong, Jeffrey M, Bush, Nicole, Obradović, Jelena, and Boyce, W Thomas
- Subjects
Pituitary-Adrenal System ,Hypothalamo-Hypophyseal System ,Parasympathetic Nervous System ,Sympathetic Nervous System ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Stress ,Psychological ,Child Development ,Arousal ,Age Factors ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Female ,Male ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Mental Health ,Clinical Research ,Neurosciences ,Pediatric ,Mind and Body ,2.3 Psychological ,social and economic factors ,Aetiology ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Good Health and Well Being ,Psychology ,Cognitive Sciences ,Developmental & Child Psychology - Abstract
Despite widespread recognition that the physiological systems underlying stress reactivity are well coordinated at a neurobiological level, surprisingly little empirical attention has been given to delineating precisely how the systems actually interact with one another when confronted with stress. We examined cross-system response proclivities in anticipation of and following standardized laboratory challenges in 664 4- to 14-year-olds from four independent studies. In each study, measures of stress reactivity within both the locus coeruleus-norepinephrine system (i.e., the sympathetic and parasympathetic branches of the autonomic nervous system) and the corticotrophin releasing hormone system (i.e., the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis) were collected. Latent profile analyses revealed six distinctive patterns that recurred across the samples: moderate reactivity (average cross-system activation; 52%-80% of children across samples), parasympathetic-specific reactivity (2%-36%), anticipatory arousal (4%-9%), multisystem reactivity (7%-14%), hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis specific reactivity (6%-7%), and underarousal (0%-2%). Groups meaningfully differed in socioeconomic status, family adversity, and age. Results highlight the sample-level reliability of children's neuroendocrine responses to stress and suggest important cross-system regularities that are linked to development and prior experiences and may have implications for subsequent physical and mental morbidity.
- Published
- 2014
28. An Integrative View of School Functioning: Transactions Between Self‐Regulation, School Engagement, and Teacher–Child Relationship Quality
- Author
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Portilla, Ximena A, Ballard, Parissa J, Adler, Nancy E, Boyce, W Thomas, and Obradović, Jelena
- Subjects
Curriculum and Pedagogy ,Education Systems ,Psychology ,Education ,Pediatric ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Mental Health ,Achievement ,Attention ,Attitude ,Child ,Child Behavior ,Child ,Preschool ,Faculty ,Female ,Humans ,Impulsive Behavior ,Interpersonal Relations ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Schools ,Cognitive Sciences ,Developmental & Child Psychology ,Specialist studies in education ,Applied and developmental psychology - Abstract
This study investigates the dynamic interplay between teacher-child relationship quality and children's behaviors across kindergarten and first grade to predict academic competence in first grade. Using a sample of 338 ethnically diverse 5-year-old children, nested path analytic models were conducted to examine bidirectional pathways between children's behaviors and teacher-child relationship quality. Low self-regulation in kindergarten fall, as indexed by inattention and impulsive behaviors, predicted more conflict with teachers in kindergarten spring and this effect persisted into first grade. Conflict and low self-regulation jointly predicted decreases in school engagement which in turn predicted first-grade academic competence. Findings illustrate the importance of considering transactions between self-regulation, teacher-child relationship quality, and school engagement in predicting academic competence.
- Published
- 2014
29. Latino Children's Body Mass Index at 2–3.5 Years Predicts Sympathetic Nervous System Activity at 5 Years
- Author
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Alkon, Abbey, Harley, Kim G, Neilands, Torsten B, Tambellini, Katelyn, Lustig, Robert H, Boyce, W Thomas, and Eskenazi, Brenda
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Prevention ,Pediatric ,Neurosciences ,Nutrition ,Adult ,Arrhythmia ,Sinus ,Child Welfare ,Child ,Preschool ,Diet ,Female ,Health Behavior ,Hispanic or Latino ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Male ,Mother-Child Relations ,Mothers ,Parenting ,Pediatric Obesity ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Sedentary Behavior ,Social Environment ,Sympathetic Nervous System ,Hispanic Americans ,Sedentary Lifestyle ,Nutrition and dietetics ,Paediatrics ,Public health - Abstract
BackgroundTo understand whether the relationship between young children's autonomic nervous system (ANS) responses predicted their BMI, or vice versa, the association between standardized BMI (zBMI) at 2, 3.5, and 5 years of age and ANS reactivity at 3.5-5 years of age, and whether zBMI predicts later ANS reactivity or whether early ANS reactivity predicts later zBMI, was studied.MethodsLow-income, primarily Latino children (n=112) were part of a larger cohort study of mothers recruited during early pregnancy. Study measures included maternal prenatal weight, children's health behaviors (i.e., time watching television, fast food consumption, and time playing outdoors), children's height and weight at 2, 3.5, and 5 years, and children's ANS reactivity at 3.5 and 5 years. ANS measures of sympathetic nervous system (i.e., pre-ejection period) and parasympathetic nervous system (i.e., respiratory sinus arrhythmia) activity were monitored during rest and four challenges. Reactivity was calculated as the difference between mean challenge response and rest. Structural equation models analyzed the relationship between children's zBMI at 2, 3.5, and 5 years and ANS reactivity at 3.5 and 5 years, adjusting for mother's BMI, children's behaviors, and changes in height.ResultsThere was no association between zBMI and ANS cross-sectionally. Children with high zBMI at 2 or 3.5 years or large zBMI increases from 2 to 3.5 years of age had decreased sympathetic activity at 5 years. Neither sympathetic nor parasympathetic reactivity at 3.5 years predicted later zBMI.ConclusionsIncreased zBMI early in childhood may dampen young children's SNS responses later in life.
- Published
- 2014
30. Prenatal adversities and Latino children's autonomic nervous system reactivity trajectories from 6 months to 5 years of age.
- Author
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Alkon, Abbey, Boyce, W Thomas, Tran, Linh, Harley, Kim G, Neuhaus, John, and Eskenazi, Brenda
- Subjects
Parasympathetic Nervous System ,Sympathetic Nervous System ,Humans ,Arrhythmia ,Sinus ,Cohort Studies ,Mother-Child Relations ,Mothers ,Gestational Age ,Pregnancy ,Heart Rate ,Social Class ,Social Support ,Poverty ,Adult ,Middle Aged ,Child ,Preschool ,Infant ,Female ,Male ,Arrhythmia ,Sinus ,Child ,Preschool ,Cardiovascular ,Pediatric ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Neurosciences ,Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,2.3 Psychological ,social and economic factors ,General Science & Technology - Abstract
The purpose of the study was to determine whether mothers' adversities experienced during early pregnancy are associated with offspring's autonomic nervous system (ANS) reactivity trajectories from 6 months to 5 years of age. This cohort study of primarily Latino families included maternal interviews at 13-14 weeks gestation about their experience of a range of adversities: father's absence, general social support, poverty level, and household density. ANS measures of heart rate, respiratory sinus arrhythmia (parasympathetic nervous system) and preejection period (sympathetic nervous system) were collected during resting and challenging conditions on children at 6 months and 1, 3.5 and 5 years of age. Reactivity measures were calculated as the mean of the responses to challenging conditions minus a resting condition. Fixed effects models were conducted for the 212 children with two or more timepoints of ANS measures. Interactions between maternal prenatal adversity levels and child age at time of ANS protocol were included in the models, allowing the calculation of separate trajectories or slopes for each level of adversity. Results showed no significant relations between mothers' prenatal socioeconomic or social support adversity and offspring's parasympathetic nervous system trajectories, but there was a statistically significant relationship between social support adversity and offspring's heart rate trajectories (p
- Published
- 2014
31. Family Adversity and Autonomic Reactivity Association With Immune Changes in HIV-Affected School Children
- Author
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Thomas, Melanie R, Wara, Diane, Saxton, Katherine, Truskier, Mary, Chesney, Margaret A, and Boyce, W Thomas
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Immunology ,HIV/AIDS ,Pediatric ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Clinical Research ,Autonomic Nervous System ,CD4 Lymphocyte Count ,CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes ,CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes ,Case-Control Studies ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Family Conflict ,Female ,HIV Infections ,Humans ,Killer Cells ,Natural ,Life Change Events ,Male ,Stress ,Psychological ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,HIV ,children ,stress ,reactivity ,immune ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Psychiatry ,Clinical sciences ,Biological psychology - Abstract
ObjectiveTo explore whether primary school entry is associated with changes in immune system parameters in HIV-affected children. HIV-affected children are vulnerable to psychosocial stressors, regardless of their own HIV serological status.MethodsData from 38 HIV-positive and 29 HIV-negative children born to seropositive women were obtained. Measures included family adversity questionnaires, autonomic nervous system (ANS) reactivity, and enumerative and functional changes in peripheral blood immune parameters.ResultsIn comparison with children who were HIV-negative, children who were HIV-positive at baseline had fewer CD4(+) T lymphocytes (mean [M] = 916 versus 1206 cells/mm(3) × 10(3); F = 7.8, p = .007), more CD8(+) cells (M = 1046 versus 720 cells/mm(3) × 10(3); F = 7.98, p = .006), and diminished natural killer cell cytotoxicity (M = -0.29 versus 0.41; F = 8.87, p = .004). School entry was associated with changes in immune parameters, but HIV status was not associated with the magnitude of changes. Changes in immune parameters after school entry were associated with family stress and preschool entry ANS reactivity. Highly ANS reactive children had either the greatest increase in CD8(+) cells after school entry or the greatest decrease, depending on reported levels of family adversity (B = 215.35; t = 3.74, p < .001). Changes in functional immune assays were significantly associated with the interactions between HIV status and ANS reactivity.ConclusionsThese results suggest that autonomic reactivity is associated with increased immunological sensitivity to adverse or challenging social contexts among children affected by HIV.
- Published
- 2013
32. Social stratification, classroom climate, and the behavioral adaptation of kindergarten children.
- Author
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Boyce, W Thomas, Obradovic, Jelena, Bush, Nicole R, Stamperdahl, Juliet, Kim, Young Shin, and Adler, Nancy
- Subjects
Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Adaptation ,Psychological ,Child Behavior ,Social Behavior ,Social Dominance ,Child Development ,Mental Health ,Models ,Psychological ,Social Class ,Social Environment ,Students ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,California ,Female ,Male ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Pediatric Research Initiative ,Pediatric ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Reduced Inequalities ,child development ,social dominance ,stress ,mental health - Abstract
Socioeconomic status (SES) is the single most potent determinant of health within human populations, from infancy through old age. Although the social stratification of health is nearly universal, there is persistent uncertainty regarding the dimensions of SES that effect such inequalities and thus little clarity about the principles of intervention by which inequalities might be abated. Guided by animal models of hierarchical organization and the health correlates of subordination, this prospective study examined the partitioning of children's adaptive behavioral development by their positions within kindergarten classroom hierarchies. A sample of 338 5-y-old children was recruited from 29 Berkeley, California public school classrooms. A naturalistic observational measure of social position, parent-reported family SES, and child-reported classroom climate were used in estimating multilevel, random-effects models of children's adaptive behavior at the end of the kindergarten year. Children occupying subordinate positions had significantly more maladaptive behavioral outcomes than their dominant peers. Further, interaction terms revealed that low family SES and female sex magnified, and teachers' child-centered pedagogical practices diminished, the adverse influences of social subordination. Taken together, results suggest that, even within early childhood groups, social stratification is associated with a partitioning of adaptive behavioral outcomes and that the character of larger societal and school structures in which such groups are nested can moderate rank-behavior associations.
- Published
- 2012
33. The impact of social disparity on prefrontal function in childhood.
- Author
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Sheridan, Margaret A, Sarsour, Khaled, Jutte, Douglas, D'Esposito, Mark, and Boyce, W Thomas
- Subjects
Salivary Glands ,Prefrontal Cortex ,Humans ,Hydrocortisone ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Behavior ,Stress ,Psychological ,Language ,Family ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Female ,Male ,Preschool ,Stress ,Psychological ,General Science & Technology - Abstract
The prefrontal cortex (PFC) develops from birth through late adolescence. This extended developmental trajectory provides many opportunities for experience to shape the structure and function of the PFC. To date, a few studies have reported links between parental socioeconomic status (SES) and prefrontal function in childhood, raising the possibility that aspects of environment associated with SES impact prefrontal function. Considering that behavioral measures of prefrontal function are associated with learning across multiple domains, this is an important area of investigation. In this study, we used fMRI to replicate previous findings, demonstrating an association between parental SES and PFC function during childhood. In addition, we present two hypothetical mechanisms by which SES could come to affect PFC function of this association: language environment and stress reactivity. We measured language use in the home environment and change in salivary cortisol before and after fMRI scanning. Complexity of family language, but not the child's own language use, was associated with both parental SES and PFC activation. Change in salivary cortisol was also associated with both SES and PFC activation. These observed associations emphasize the importance of both enrichment and adversity-reduction interventions in creating good developmental environments for all children.
- Published
- 2012
34. Physiological Reactivity, Social Support, and Memory in Early Childhood
- Author
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Quas, Jodi A., Bauer, Amy, and Boyce, W. Thomas
- Published
- 2004
35. Colour information biases facial age estimation and reduces inter-observer variability
- Author
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Hsieh, Jean Y. J., primary, Boyce, W. Paul, additional, Goddard, Erin, additional, and Clifford, Colin W. G., additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Temperament, Tympanum, and Temperature: Four Provisional Studies of the Biobehavioral Correlates of Tympanic Membrane Temperature Asymmetries
- Author
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Boyce, W. Thomas, Essex, Marilyn J., Alkon, Abbey, Smider, Nancy A., Pickrell, Tyler, and Kagan, Jerome
- Published
- 2002
37. Integration of DNA methylation patterns and genetic variation in human pediatric tissues help inform EWAS design and interpretation
- Author
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Islam, Sumaiya A., Goodman, Sarah J., MacIsaac, Julia L., Obradović, Jelena, Barr, Ronald G., Boyce, W. Thomas, and Kobor, Michael S.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. DNA identification of mountain lions involved in livestock predaton and public safety incidents and investigations
- Author
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Ernest, H. B. and Boyce, W. M.
- Subjects
Puma concolor ,mountain lion ,California ,bobcat ,Lynx rufus ,forensics ,DNA techniques ,noninvasive sampling ,fecal DNA ,prey swab DNA ,predation ,sheep predation ,techniques - Abstract
Using three case studies, we demonstrated the utility of techniques to analyze DNA from trace samples collected at sites of livestock predation and public safety incidents. Genetic analysis was used to determine species, individual identity, and relatedness between individuals. We documented the presence and individual identities of a mountain lion (Puma concolor) and a bobcat (Lynx rufus) from swab samples collected from bite wounds in domestic sheep that had been killed at the University of California Hopland Research and Extension Center, Mendocino County, California. Four lions and two bobcats in Redwood National Park were individually identified and tested for relatedness using DNA from scats and captured animals. Another lion was genetically typed and matched at a public safety incident through blood spots left near a barn in one location in the San Joaquin Valley, and muscle sample collected from a lion captured ten miles distant one week later. We applied statistical techniques developed for human forensic DNA analysis and a DNA database that we have compiled for California mountain lions.
- Published
- 2000
39. Socioeconomic Disparities Affect Prefrontal Function in Children
- Author
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Kishiyama, Mark M., Boyce, W. Thomas, and Jimenez, Amy M.
- Abstract
Social inequalities have profound effects on the physical and mental health of children. Children from low socioeconomic status (SES) backgrounds perform below children from higher SES backgrounds on tests of intelligence and academic achievement, and recent findings indicate that low SES (LSES) children are impaired on behavioral measures of prefrontal function. However, the influence of socioeconomic disparity on direct measures of neural activity is unknown. Here, we provide electrophysiological evidence indicating that prefrontal function is altered in LSES children. We found that prefrontal-dependent electrophysiological measures of attention were reduced in LSES compared to high SES (HSES) children in a pattern similar to that observed in patients with lateral prefrontal cortex (PFC) damage. These findings provide neurophysiological evidence that social inequalities are associated with alterations in PFC function in LSES children. There are a number of factors associated with LSES rearing conditions that may have contributed to these results such as greater levels of stress and lack of access to cognitively stimulating materials and experiences. Targeting specific prefrontal processes affected by socioeconomic disparity could be helpful in developing intervention programs for LSES children.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Social stratification, classroom climate, and the behavioral adaptation of kindergarten children
- Author
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Boyce, W. Thomas, Obradović, Jelena, Bush, Nicole R., Stamperdahl, Juliet, Kim, Young Shin, and Adler, Nancy
- Published
- 2012
41. Gene-environment interplay in Drosophila melanogaster: Chronic food deprivation in early life affects adult exploratory and fitness traits
- Author
-
Burns, James Geoffrey, Svetec, Nicolas, Rowe, Locke, Mery, Frederic, Dolan, Michael J., Boyce, W. Thomas, and Sokolowski, Marla B.
- Published
- 2012
42. Early childhood poverty, immune-mediated disease processes, and adult productivity
- Author
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Ziol-Guest, Kathleen M., Duncan, Greg J., Kalil, Ariel, and Boyce, W. Thomas
- Published
- 2012
43. Toward a new biology of social adversity
- Author
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Boyce, W. Thomas, Sokolowski, Marla B., and Robinson, Gene E.
- Published
- 2012
44. Association Between Measures Derived From Children's Primary Exfoliated Teeth and Psychopathology Symptoms: Results From a Community-Based Study
- Author
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Dunn, Erin C., primary, Mountain, Rebecca V., additional, Davis, Kathryn A., additional, Shaffer, Ida, additional, Smith, Andrew D. A. C., additional, Roubinov, Danielle S., additional, Den Besten, Pamela, additional, Bidlack, Felicitas B., additional, and Boyce, W. Thomas, additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. A Conversation With Leonard Syme
- Author
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Syme, Leonard and Boyce, W. Thomas
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Association between measures derived from children's primary exfoliated teeth and psychopathology symptoms: Results from a community-based study
- Author
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Dunn, Erin C., Mountain, Rebecca V., Davis, Kathryn A., Shaffer, Ida, Smith, Andrew D. A. C., Roubinov, Danielle S., Den Besten, Pamela, Bidlack, Felicitas B., and Boyce, W. Thomas
- Subjects
internalizing symptoms ,pediatric ,prevention ,General Engineering ,biomarkers ,Health & Wellbeing ,externalizing symptoms 1 ,Mathematics and Statistics Research Group ,teeth - Abstract
Mental disorders are among the most disabling health conditions globally. However, there remains a lack of valid, reliable, noninvasive, and inexpensive biomarkers to identify (at an early age) people who are at the greatest risk of experiencing a future mental health condition. Exfoliated primary teeth, when used in combination with established and emerging tools (e.g., family history, imaging, genetics, epigenetics), may provide important additional insights about vulnerability to mental illness. Teeth are especially promising because they develop in parallel with the brain and maintain a permanent record of environmental insults occurring during prenatal and perinatal development. Despite their potential, few empirical studies have investigated features of exfoliated teeth in relation to mental health. Here, we used micro-CT imaging to test the hypothesis that measures derived from exfoliated primary incisors associated with psychopathology symptoms in a community-based sample of children (n = 37). We found that enamel volume (β = −0.77, 95% CI, −1.35 to −0.18, P = 0.01) had large negative associations with internalizing symptoms, and enamel mineral density (β = 0.77, 95% CI, 0.18–1.35, P = 0.01) had large positive associations with internalizing behavioral symptoms, even after stringent control for multiple testing. Pulp volume (β = −0.50, 95% CI, −0.90 to −0.09, P = 0.02) had a moderately-large negative association with externalizing behavioral symptoms, though these associations did not survive multiple testing correction. These results support the ongoing investigation of teeth as potential novel biomarkers of mental health risk.
- Published
- 2022
47. Rethinking What Is Important: Biologic Versus Social Predictors of Childhood Health and Educational Outcomes
- Author
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Jutte, Douglas P., Brownell, Marni, Roos, Noralou P., Schippers, Christine, Boyce, W. Thomas, and Syme, S. Leonard
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Biological Sensitivity to Context: The Interactive Effects of Stress Reactivity and Family Adversity on Socioemotional Behavior and School Readiness
- Author
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Obradović, Jelena, Stamperdahl, Juliet, Bush, Nicole R., Adler, Nancy E., and Boyce, W. Thomas
- Published
- 2010
49. The contribution of club participation to adolescent health: evidence from six countries
- Author
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Zambon, A, Morgan, A, Vereecken, C, Colombini, S, Boyce, W, Mazur, J, Lemma, P, and Cavallo, F
- Published
- 2010
50. Differential Item Functioning of a Family Affluence Scale: Validation Study on Data from HBSC 2001/02
- Author
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Schnohr, C. W., Kreiner, S., Due, E. P., Currie, C., Boyce, W., and Diderichsen, F.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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