Invited Commentary The importance of early developmental neuroscience for research, practice, and policy

Conteúdo do artigo principal

Ana Raquel Marcelino Mesquita
Adriana da Conceição Soares Sampaio
Ana Alexandra Caldas Osório

Resumo

Invited Commentary: The importance of early developmental neuroscience for research, practice, and policy

Downloads

Não há dados estatísticos.

Detalhes do artigo

Seção
Editorial

Referências

Black, M. M., Walker, S. P., Fernald, L. C., Andersen, C. T., DiGirolamo, A. M., Lu, C., ... & Lancet Early Childhood Development Series Steering Committee. (2017). Early childhood development coming of age: science through the life course. The Lancet, 389(10064), 77-90.

Chugani HT. A critical period of brain development: studies of cerebral glucose utilization with PET. Prev Med 1998; 27(2):184-8.

Cruz, S., Lifter, K., Barros, C., Vieira, R., & Sampaio, A. (2020). Neural and psychophysiological correlates of social communication development: Evidence from sensory processing, motor, cognitive, language and emotional behavioral milestones across infancy. Applied Neuropsychology: Child, 1-20.

Doyle, O., Harmon, C. P., Heckman, J. J., & Tremblay, R. E. (2009). Investing in early human development: timing and economic efficiency. Economics & Human Biology, 7(1), 1-6.

Dubois J, Alison M, Counsell SJ, Hertz‐Pannier L, Hüppi PS, Benders MJ. MRI of the neonatal brain: a review of methodological challenges and neuroscientific advances. J Magn Reson Imaging 2021; 53(5):1318-43.

Heckman J. J. (2008). Schools, Skills, and Synapses. Economic inquiry, 46(3), 289. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1465-7295.2008.00163.x

Heckman J. J. (2012). Invest in early childhood development: Reduce deficits, strengthen the economy. Retrieved from http://heckmanequation.org

Heckman, J. J., & Karapakula, G. (2019). Intergenerational and intragenerational externalities of the Perry Preschool Project (No. w25889). National Bureau of Economic Research.

IOM/NRC (Institute of Medicine and National Research Council) (2014). The cost of inaction for young children globally: Workshop summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press.

Fox, S. E., Levitt, P., & Nelson III, C. A. (2010). How the timing and quality of early experiences influence the development of brain architecture. Child development, 81(1), 28-40. Huttenlocher PR. Synaptic density in human frontal cortex-developmental changes and effects of aging. Brain Res 1979; 163(2):195-205.

Lenroot RK, Giedd JN. Brain development in children and adolescents: insights from anatomical magnetic resonance imaging. Neurosci Biobehav Rev 2006; 30(6):718-29.

Luby JL. Poverty’s most insidious damage: the developing brain. JAMA Pediatr 2015; 169: 810–11.

McLaughlin, K. A., Fox, N. A., Zeanah, C. H., & Nelson, C. A. (2011). Adverse rearing environments and neural development in children: The development of frontal electroencephalogram asymmetry. Biological psychiatry, 70(11), 1008-1015.

National Scientific Council on the Developing Child (2012). The Science of Neglect: The Persistent Absence of Responsive Care Disrupts the Developing Brain: Working Paper No. 12. Retrieved from www.developingchild.harvard.edu.

Noble KG, Houston SM, Brito NH, et al. Family income, parental education and brain structure in children and adolescents. Nat Neurosci 2015; 18: 773–78.

Ouyang M, Dubois J, Yu Q, Mukherjee P, Huang H. Delineation of early brain development from fetuses to infants with diffusion MRI and beyond. Neuroimage 2019;185:836-50.

Sampaio, A., & Lifter, K. (2014). Neurosciences of infant mental health development: Recent findings and implications for counseling psychology. Journal of counseling psychology, 61(4), 513.

Shonkoff, J. (2010). Building a new biodevelopmental framework to guide the future of early childhood policy. Child Dev, 81, 357-367.

Shonkoff, J. P., & Bales, S. N. (2011). Science does not speak for itself: Translating child development research for the public and its policymakers.

Shonkoff JP, Garner AS. The lifelong effects of early childhood adversity and toxic stress. Pediatrics 2012; 129: e232–46.

Weaver IC. Integrating early life experience, gene expression, brain development, and emergent phenotypes: unraveling the thread of nature via nurture. Adv Genet 2014; 86: 277–307.