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Background: Social disadvantage has been associated with early socioemotional difficulties. In this study, we examined mechanisms that relate prenatal social disadvantage (PSD) to the development of early socioemotional problems by testing whether these associations were mediated by 1) neonatal brain volumes (BVs) and/or 2) early parenting behaviors.
Methods: Women were recruited early in their pregnancies and followed prospectively. PSD encompassed access to material (e.g., income-to-needs, health insurance, area deprivation, nutrition, education) resources during pregnancy. Shortly after birth, neonates underwent structural magnetic resonance scanning. Mother-child dyads returned for parenting observations at child age 1 year, and parents reported child socioemotional problems (Infant-Toddler Social and Emotional Assessment: externalizing, dysregulation, internalizing) at age 2 years (N = 267; 45% female). Simple and parallel mediation models were used to test hypotheses.
Results: Greater PSD was associated with increased externalizing and dysregulation symptoms at age 2 years. PSD-associated reductions in neonatal BVs (cortical gray matter, white matter, total brain) mediated both PSD-externalizing and PSD-dysregulation associations. The PSD-externalizing association was additionally mediated by early parenting behaviors, particularly nonsupportive parenting behaviors. Thus, for externalizing symptoms, nonsupportive parenting behaviors and mediating brain metrics were examined simultaneously in parallel mediation models. Nonsupportive parenting remained a significant mediator, while neonatal BVs were no longer significant.
Conclusions: PSD-associated brain structural alterations at birth may serve as early risk factors for the development of multidimensional socioemotional difficulties in toddlerhood. However, parenting emerged as a stronger mediator for externalizing problems, lending support to parenting behaviors as key intervention targets for the prevention of externalizing problems during early childhood.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.biopsych.2025.05.015 | DOI Listing |
JMIR Res Protoc
September 2025
Department of Development & Environmental Studies, Palacký University Olomouc, Olomouc, Czech Republic.
Background: Children in low- and middle-income countries face obstacles to optimal language and cognitive development due to a variety of factors related to adverse socioeconomic conditions. One of these factors is compromised caregiver-child interactions and associated pressures on parenting. Early development interventions, such as dialogic book-sharing (DBS), address this variable, with evidence from both high-income countries and urban areas of low- and middle-income countries showing that such interventions enhance caregiver-child interaction and the associated benefits for child cognitive and socioemotional development.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChild Psychiatry Hum Dev
September 2025
School of Psychology, Deakin University, 221 Burwood Highway, Burwood, VIC, 3125, Australia.
The COVID-19 pandemic presented a unique opportunity to investigate the longitudinal associations between parents' pre-pandemic mental health issues and their emotion-related parenting practices during the pandemic, as well as the impact on children's socio-emotional functioning. The present study aimed to: 1) investigate associations between pre-existing parent mental health issues (2019) with children's long-term socio-emotional functioning (2021), via changes in emotion-related parenting practices during the COVID-19 pandemic (2020); and 2) test whether COVID-19 pandemic-related environmental stressors during 2020 and 2021 exacerbated associations between emotion-related parenting practices and children's socio-emotional functioning. Data were drawn from the Child and Parent Emotion Study (CAPES).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChild Psychiatry Hum Dev
September 2025
Department of Psychology, University of California, Los Angeles, CA, USA.
Youth anxiety and depression are rising rapidly worldwide, highlighting the need for efficient school-based assessment tools across sociocultural contexts. The Revised Child Anxiety and Depression Scale (RCADS) is one of the most widely used screening measures, with demonstrated cross-cultural applicability. However, its psychometric properties have rarely been evaluated in Chinese populations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Dev Behav Pediatr
September 2025
Chobanian and Avedisian School of Medicine, Boston Medical Center, Boston University, Boston, MA.
John is a 12-year-old African-American boy with a Specific Learning Disorder in Reading and Generalized Anxiety Disorder who you are seeing in follow-up at your clinic. Last fall, when John was having an escalation of his anxiety symptoms at school, he enacted the behavior intervention plan (BIP) that had been previously established by his educational team of informing his teacher that he needed to leave the classroom. He then paced the hallway outside of his classroom as a method of coping with the anxiety that he was experiencing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEar Hear
September 2025
Department of Otorhinolaryngology, University Medical Center Groningen (UMCG), University of Groningen, Groningen, the Netherlands.
Objectives: Alexithymia is characterized by difficulties in identifying and describing one's own emotions. Alexithymia has previously been associated with deficits in the processing of emotional information at both behavioral and neurobiological levels, and some studies have shown elevated levels of alexithymic traits in adults with hearing loss. This explorative study investigated alexithymia in young and adolescent school-age children with hearing aids in relation to (1) a sample of age-matched children with normal hearing, (2) age, (3) hearing thresholds, and (4) vocal emotion recognition.
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