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Early-life stress and cognitive outcome
Psychopharmacology, 2010Early-life stress is associated with later neuropsychiatric illness. While the association between early-life stress and brain development is well recognized, relatively few studies have examined the association between exposure to early-life stress and cognitive outcome.The objective of this paper is to examine the association between early-life ...
Dawson W Hedges
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Praxis der Kinderpsychologie und Kinderpsychiatrie, 2019
Early Life Stress Stress and daily hassles are a normal part of day-to day-life. The amount of control that is experienced strongly contributes to resilience and coping. Children very frequently do not experience control over the stressors within their lives. Starting from pregnancy, they are subjected - via the maternal endocrine system - to a variety
Eva, Möhler, Franz, Resch
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Early Life Stress Stress and daily hassles are a normal part of day-to day-life. The amount of control that is experienced strongly contributes to resilience and coping. Children very frequently do not experience control over the stressors within their lives. Starting from pregnancy, they are subjected - via the maternal endocrine system - to a variety
Eva, Möhler, Franz, Resch
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The effects of early life stress on impulsivity
Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews, 2022Elevated impulsivity is a symptom shared by various psychiatric disorders such as substance use disorder, bipolar disorder, and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder. However, impulsivity is not a unitary construct and impulsive behaviors fall into two subcategories: impulsive action and impulsive choice.
Evelyn Ordoñes, Sanchez +1 more
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The lifespan consequences of early life stress
Physiology & Behavior, 2012Early life stress (ELS), an experience of severe stress due for example to parental loss, abuse or neglect during the childhood years, may have profound long-term effects on the individual's physiology and psychology. Here we review the findings of the Helsinki Birth Cohort Study 1934-44 (n=13,345), of whom approximately 14% were temporarily separated ...
Anu-Katriina, Pesonen +1 more
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The effects of early life stress on reward processing [PDF]
Early life stress (ELS), in the form of childhood maltreatment, abuse, or neglect, increases the risk for psychiatric sequelae later in life. The neurobiology of response to early stress and of reward processing overlap substantially, leading to the prediction that reward processing may be a primary mediator of the effects of early life stress.
Andrew M Novick +2 more
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Early life stress, depression and epigenetics
2023Different factors are essential in increasing the vulnerability to psychiatric disorders, such as genetics. Among these factors, early life stress (ELS), including sexual, physical, emotional abuse, and emotional and physical neglect, enhances the odds of having menial conditions throughout life.
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The effects of early-life and intergenerational stress on the brain
Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 2023Stress experienced during ontogeny can have profound effects on the adult phenotype. However, stress can also be experienced intergenerationally, where an offspring's phenotype can be moulded by stress experienced by the parents. Although early-life and intergenerational stress can alter anatomy, physiology, and behaviour, nothing is known
Lara D. LaDage +4 more
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Early life stress and susceptibility to addiction in adolescence
2021Early life stress (ELS) is a risk factor for developing a host of psychiatric disorders. Adolescence is a particularly vulnerable period for the onset of these disorders and substance use disorders (SUDs). Here we discuss ELS and its effects in adolescence, especially SUDs, and their correlates with molecular changes to signaling systems in reward and ...
K E, Tschetter +5 more
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