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Neonatal amygdala volumes and the development of self-regulation from early infancy to toddlerhood.

Neonatal amygdala volumes and the development of self-regulation from early infancy to toddlerhood.
Neonatal amygdala volumes and the development of self-regulation from early infancy to toddlerhood.
Objective: At the broadest level, self-regulation (SR) refers to a range of separate, but interrelated, processes (e.g., working memory, inhibition, and emotion regulation) central for the regulation of cognition, emotion, and behavior that contribute to a plethora of health and mental health outcomes. SR skills develop rapidly in early childhood, but their neurobiological underpinnings are not yet well understood. The amygdala is one key structure in negative emotion generation that may disrupt SR. In the current study, we investigated the associations between neonatal amygdala volumes and mother-reported and observed child SR during the first 3 years of life. We expected that larger neonatal amygdala volumes would be related to poorer SR in children. Method: We measured amygdala volumes from magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) performed at age M = 3.7 ± 1.0. We examined the associations between the amygdala volumes corrected for intracranial volume (ICV) and (a) parent-reported indicators of SR at 6, 12, and 24 months (N = 102) and (b) observed task-based indicators of SR (working memory and inhibitory control) at 30 months of age in a smaller subset of participants (N = 80). Results: Bilateral neonatal amygdala volumes predicted poorer working memory at 30 months in girls, whereas no association was detected between amygdalae and inhibitory control or parent-reported SR. The left amygdala by sex interaction survived correction for multiple comparisons. Conclusions: Neonatal amygdala volume is associated with working memory, particularly among girls, and the association is observed earlier than in prior studies. Moreover, our findings suggest that the neural correlates for parent-reported, compared to observed early life SR, may differ. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved)
0894-4105
285 - 299
Novli, Saara
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Tuulari, Jetro J.
e458544f-5ace-4d6f-b311-7ecdc71a0619
Bridgett, Pelto, Juho
8e3ed39c-ed23-4aa6-a523-350adfb39d3a
Eskola, David J.
f4d1498f-93f7-48e4-9013-c2ca460d849d
Lehtola, Eeva
0583069a-120d-42d4-9f72-d74608da5c65
Hashempour, Satu J.
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Korja, Niloofar
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Riikka, Kataja
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Eeva-Leena, Saunavaara
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Jani, Parkkola
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Lähdesmäki, Riitta
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Scheinin, Tuire
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Fernandes, Michelle
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Karlsson, Michelle
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Lewis, Linnea
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Fonov, John D.
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Collins, Vladimir S.
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Louis, D.
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Hasse, Karlsson
5ad58ea2-c487-4b41-945f-21bd08909f69
Novli, Saara
13f02975-39e5-4f93-ab67-40b8f3143c46
Tuulari, Jetro J.
e458544f-5ace-4d6f-b311-7ecdc71a0619
Bridgett, Pelto, Juho
8e3ed39c-ed23-4aa6-a523-350adfb39d3a
Eskola, David J.
f4d1498f-93f7-48e4-9013-c2ca460d849d
Lehtola, Eeva
0583069a-120d-42d4-9f72-d74608da5c65
Hashempour, Satu J.
76b1ac1d-4569-45b6-abed-03ae96b9141c
Korja, Niloofar
d3b77940-a84e-42d9-a05b-7ad7ecb0879d
Riikka, Kataja
e1a1058f-d597-4b2c-aad5-6c90695e33f5
Eeva-Leena, Saunavaara
7c1566ed-559a-406c-9f0f-e00f6e87dad3
Jani, Parkkola
78eb30a4-fd04-4bee-b081-8a2bfb0ca2a4
Lähdesmäki, Riitta
f2772bf0-130e-4655-86e6-9eb054e28559
Scheinin, Tuire
0166b2b0-78f5-43a6-b2b8-ad181802fab5
Fernandes, Michelle
16d62e60-ae8e-455f-88d3-88e778253b4a
Karlsson, Michelle
179d7915-5677-48c6-b76b-29b09d35b08f
Lewis, Linnea
71494adf-0b60-48c0-8cbd-2f2b632ca57f
Fonov, John D.
77722b8f-cb78-40ac-9a4a-2e722822b5dd
Collins, Vladimir S.
700347a8-6827-4ad5-95aa-bba2368afa31
Louis, D.
a041268e-f3d1-49b7-aa0a-baebbc7b4bff
Hasse, Karlsson
5ad58ea2-c487-4b41-945f-21bd08909f69

Novli, Saara, Tuulari, Jetro J., Bridgett, Pelto, Juho, Eskola, David J., Lehtola, Eeva, Hashempour, Satu J., Korja, Niloofar, Riikka, Kataja, Eeva-Leena, Saunavaara, Jani, Parkkola, Lähdesmäki, Riitta, Scheinin, Tuire, Fernandes, Michelle, Karlsson, Michelle, Lewis, Linnea, Fonov, John D., Collins, Vladimir S., Louis, D. and Hasse, Karlsson (2021) Neonatal amygdala volumes and the development of self-regulation from early infancy to toddlerhood. Neuropsychology, 35 (3), 285 - 299. (doi:10.1037/neu0000724).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective: At the broadest level, self-regulation (SR) refers to a range of separate, but interrelated, processes (e.g., working memory, inhibition, and emotion regulation) central for the regulation of cognition, emotion, and behavior that contribute to a plethora of health and mental health outcomes. SR skills develop rapidly in early childhood, but their neurobiological underpinnings are not yet well understood. The amygdala is one key structure in negative emotion generation that may disrupt SR. In the current study, we investigated the associations between neonatal amygdala volumes and mother-reported and observed child SR during the first 3 years of life. We expected that larger neonatal amygdala volumes would be related to poorer SR in children. Method: We measured amygdala volumes from magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) performed at age M = 3.7 ± 1.0. We examined the associations between the amygdala volumes corrected for intracranial volume (ICV) and (a) parent-reported indicators of SR at 6, 12, and 24 months (N = 102) and (b) observed task-based indicators of SR (working memory and inhibitory control) at 30 months of age in a smaller subset of participants (N = 80). Results: Bilateral neonatal amygdala volumes predicted poorer working memory at 30 months in girls, whereas no association was detected between amygdalae and inhibitory control or parent-reported SR. The left amygdala by sex interaction survived correction for multiple comparisons. Conclusions: Neonatal amygdala volume is associated with working memory, particularly among girls, and the association is observed earlier than in prior studies. Moreover, our findings suggest that the neural correlates for parent-reported, compared to observed early life SR, may differ. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved)

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e-pub ahead of print date: 1 March 2021

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Local EPrints ID: 457197
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/457197
ISSN: 0894-4105
PURE UUID: 79ecaa0a-839e-4613-b692-91b8f40546cb
ORCID for Michelle Fernandes: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-0051-3389

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Date deposited: 26 May 2022 16:36
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:10

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Contributors

Author: Saara Novli
Author: Jetro J. Tuulari
Author: Pelto, Juho Bridgett
Author: David J. Eskola
Author: Eeva Lehtola
Author: Satu J. Hashempour
Author: Niloofar Korja
Author: Kataja Riikka
Author: Saunavaara Eeva-Leena
Author: Parkkola Jani
Author: Riitta Lähdesmäki
Author: Tuire Scheinin
Author: Michelle Fernandes ORCID iD
Author: Michelle Karlsson
Author: Linnea Lewis
Author: John D. Fonov
Author: Vladimir S. Collins
Author: D. Louis
Author: Karlsson Hasse

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