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Lecture notes Early development: Chances and Risks (SOW-PSB3DH40E)

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Lecture notes Early development: Chances and Risks (SOW-PSB3DH40E)

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Early development: Chances and Risks
Lecture 1: course introduction, biology, introduction and prep
assignment

Focus of this course

 Socio-emotional development of children
 During the first 1000 days: the period spanning roughly between
conception and one’s second birthday
 Development proceeds at a breathtaking pace
 How we view the role of nature versus nurture (environment) during
this developmental period changed over the years

It’s all nurture

 Watson’s ideas are an example of behaviourism: the environment is
the supreme force in child development.
 Nowadays: we more and more try to understand how the
environment impacts the expression of our biology

Environment influences expression of our biology

 Bee example




 Example 2: sleep trainings are examples of behaviourism: the
environment (i.e. parental behaviour) is the supreme force in child
development
 Range of reaction: biology gives a range of developmental
possibilities




But also: biology shapes the environment:

 E.g.: child with Down syndrome or child with difficult temperament

,Nature AND Nurture

 The question is not whether biological OR environmental factors are
more important
 But how the expression of our biology is shaped by the environment
we meet (programming: adapting to the environment you ewill likely
meet)
 This notion is central to this course, because development will
never be as susceptible to the environment as during the first
1000 days!

Critical and sensitive period

 Environment will have more or less influence depending on the
developmental period:
o Critical period: environment only has an impact during a
particular window, effects are irreversible
 E.g. when a kitten does not open its eyes for the first
weeks in their lives, they will not be able to see even
after they open them
o Sensitive period: environment shapes a given trait or
behaviour to a larger extent than in other periods or stages

Early development as sensitive period

 Developmental plasticity: capacity to adapt to different
envirronments
 Adapting to the environment makes infants both versatile and
vulnerable

The first 1000 DAYS of life therefore contains:

 Risks with lifelong consequences for health and wellbeing
 Chances to ‘get things right’ and to boost childrens’ development




Developmental Origins of Health and Disease (DOHaD) hypothesiss

 The DOHaD hypothesis or Barker hypothesis: exposure to certain
environmental influences during critical or sensitive periods of

, development may have significant consequences on an individual’s
short and long-term health (basically the same as the 1000 years)




 The earlier the better

The study gene-environment contributions to individual differences”

 Adoption studies: compare characteristics of adopted children with
those of both their adoptive and biological parents
 Twin studies: compare the similarities between identical and
fraternal twins reared together or apart
 True or false??? Identical twins have identical genes. So, if reared
apart any similarities they have must be due to shared genes, not
shared environment  it is often overlooked that identical twins
already shared the womb (prenatal environments)
 How much of this environment they share depends on chorionic
arrangements

Chorionic arrangements

 Dichorionic twins (1/3): separate placentas and separate fetal
circulations. Can be identical or fraternal twins (doctors like this one
the best)
 Monochorionic twins (2/3): one placenta and one fetal circulation.
Can only be identical twins. Brings more risks of e.g. one baby being
smaller due to getting less nutrition
 Greater concordance for MC identical twins than for DC identical
twins on:
o IQ scores
o Personality scores
o Schizophrenia
o Physiological measures
 But even identical twins that:
o Shared the same placenta,

, o Shared the same circulation,
o And shared the same environment
 Can be very different
 Conjoined twins

Abby and Brittany Hensel

 Each has a heart, stomach, spine, lungs, and spinal cord
 Each twin feels and controls 1 arm and 1 leg
 They can eat and write separately and simultaneously
 Activities such as running, swimming, hair-brushing, playing piano or
volleyball, riding a bicycle requires coordination

Two driver’s licences, one is married

 We are totally different persons
 Differences e.g. due to self-organisation in the brain; connections
that are made in each brain

Summary:

 Our biology and the environment interact, shaping our development
 The first 1000 days play an important role in development
 Many twin studies have underestimated the influence of prenatal
environment
 More about the prenatal environment: next week!



Lecture 2: Prenatal development

Prenatal development

 Sensitive period: window for the environment to shape fetal
development (chances & risks)
 Teratogens: agent that cause deviations during prenatal
development (teratology or developmental toxicity)
 Can cause structural malformations, but also manifestations such as
growth retardation and delays in mental development



Thalidomide

 Anti-emetic drug, first used as tranquiliser, but soon also to treat
morning sickness
 Virtually impossible to give rats a lethal dose
 >10.000 children born with severe malformations to the limbs
(phocomelia): around 40% of them died around birth
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