Stress in early childhood leads to faster maturation of certain brain regions during adolescence. In contrast, stress experienced later in life leads to slower maturation of the adolescent brain. This is the outcome of a long-term study conducted by researchers in which 37 subjects have been monitored for almost 20 years. The findings are published in Scientific Reports.
In 1998, the group - which then comprised 129 one-year-olds and their parents - was tested for the first time. Over the past 20 years, researchers studied, inter alia, their play sessions and interactions with parents, friends and classmates. The children were also subjected to MRI scans. This wealth of data has enabled researchers to investigate how stress in various life stages affected the adolescent brain of these children.
More specifically, they looked at the effects on cerebral maturation. During adolescence, our brain experiences a natural pruning process in which previously made connections between brain cells are refined, allowing the creation of more useful and efficient networks.
The researchers investigated two types of stressors - negative life events and negative influences from the social environment - in two life stages of their subjects: early childhood (0-5 years) and adolescence (14-17 years). They related these stress levels to the maturation of the prefrontal cortex, amygdala and hippocampus. These brain regions play an important role in functioning in social and emotional situations and are known to be sensitive to stress.
Stress due to negative experiences during childhood, such as illness or divorce, appears to be related to faster maturation of the prefrontal cortex and amygdala in adolescence. However, stress resulting from a negative social environment during adolescence, such as low peer esteem at school, is connected to slower maturation of the brain area hippocampus and another part of the prefrontal cortex. 'Unfortunately, in this study we can't say with certainty that stress causes these effects. However, based on animal studies we can hypothesize that these mechanisms are indeed causal,' author says.
'The fact that early childhood stress accelerates the maturation process during adolescence is consistent with theories of evolutionary biology,' says the author. 'From an evolutionary perspective, it is useful to mature faster if you grow up in a stressful environment. However, it also prevents the brain from adjusting to the current environment in a flexible way. In other words, the brain become "mature" too soon.'
The researchers were surprised to find, however, that social stress later in life seems to lead to slower maturation during adolescence. 'What makes this interesting is that a stronger effect of stress on the brain also increases the risk of developing antisocial personality traits', author says.
https://www.ru.nl/english/news-agenda/news/vm/donders/cognitive-neuroscience/2018/brain-matures-faster-due-childhood-stress/
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-018-27439-5
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