reviewAnnual Review of Public HealthMar 1, 2010Closed access

How Experience Gets Under the Skin to Create Gradients in Developmental Health

University of British Columbia · Learning Partnership · +1 more institution

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Abstract

Social environments and experiences get under the skin early in life in ways that affect the course of human development. Because most factors associated with early child development are a function of socio-economic status, differences in early child development form a socio-economic gradient. We are now learning how, when, and by what means early experiences influence key biological systems over the long term to produce gradients: a process known as biological embedding. Opportunities for biological embedding are tethered closely to sensitive periods in the development of neural circuitry. Epigenetic regulation is the best example of operating principles relevant to biological embedding. We are now in a…

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Authors

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Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Life course approach
  • Early childhood
  • Child development
  • Epigenetics
  • Developmental psychology
  • Embedding
  • Function (biology)
  • Psychology
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