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Longitudinal studies on population representative samples offer unique insights. The Estonian Children Personality Behaviour and Health Study (ECPBHS; EstChild) was launched in 1998 on two birth cohort samples at age 9 or 15 with an exceptional participation rate, has been monitored at ages 15, 18, 25 and 33, and also recruited parents of the target subjects. This multidisciplinary investigation has been focused on behavioural neuroscience, illuminating findings on what could be discerned from biomarkers, candidate genes, gene × environment interactions, and epigenetic markers in representative samples, and in birth cohorts living through societal transformation. ECPBHS analyzed how biomarkers and lifestyle are associated with real-life behaviours and developmental trajectories, phenotypes such as neuroticism, bulimia, aggressiveness or attention deficit, and outcomes from incidence of psychiatric disorders to the obtaining of university education. Novel evidence has been observed on clustering of fears and the inner structure of impulsivity and reward sensitivity, together with clues how these may have co-emerged with metabolic types. New insights have been provided to understand the classic biomarkers, cholesterol and platelet monoamine oxidase activity, as well as several functional gene variants. Hypotheses how to synthetize molecular genetics and sociology, how sex or gender matters in the light of gene×environment interactions and how family and parental roles shape the behaviour of offspring have been put forward. The ECPBHS has offered clues on why in biological psychiatry many replication attempts are predestined to fail, and how to learn from such failures.
Studies persuasively show that parental power assertion contributes to children’s hostile (defensive) mindsets, but most examined severe forms of control (abuse, harsh punishment) and aggressive children. Less is known about processes linking power assertion with children’s hostile mindsets in typical, low-risk families. Further, specific mechanisms accounting for associations between parenting and hostile mindsets are unclear; children’s theory of mind (ToM) and regulation have been suggested, implying equifinality in developmental cascades. Finally, factors that moderate impact of parenting on children’s hostile mindsets, implying multifinality, are unclear. In a study of 200 mothers, fathers, and children, we proposed that links between parental power assertion and children’s hostile mindsets are (a) accounted for by two parallel mediators – children’s poor ToM and poor regulation, and (b) moderated by their representations of parents. We expected links between power assertion and hostile mindset to be significant for children with negative representations, but defused, or absent, for children with positive representations. Parental power assertion was assessed at toddler and preschool age, ToM and regulation at preschool age, and hostile mindsets and representations of parents at early school age. We supported both mediated paths for mother–child dyads, mediation via child regulation for father–child dyads, and moderation for both.
Although most couples share a bed, current interventions rarely consider dyadic sleep patterns.
Aims
We investigated whether bedtime alignment between partners affects longitudinal sleep outcomes in older couples, with particular attention to gender differences.
Method
Based on the temporal relationship between partners’ bedtimes and the earlier sleeper’s sleep onset latency, 859 couples (1718 individuals) aged ≥60 years were classified into 5 mutually exclusive bedtime alignment groups. Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) scores, sleep onset latency and sleep efficiency were compared using analysis of variance and multivariate analysis of covariance. Both cross-sectional and 8-year longitudinal trajectory analyses were conducted.
Results
Bedtime alignment significantly affected sleep outcomes (P < 0.001, Pillai’s Trace = 0.37, F24, 3352 = 14.04, P < 0.001, η2P = 0.09). Couples with synchronised bedtimes demonstrated excellent sleep quality, whereas those with bedtime differences less than the earlier sleeper’s sleep onset latency exhibited the worst. The earlier sleepers in such couples experienced longer sleep onset latencies (53.4 ± 46.8 min) and greater sleep quality impairment (PSQI = 7.9 ± 4.1). The 8-year trajectory analysis revealed gender-specific vulnerability: only women in misaligned groups experienced progressive sleep deterioration over time (5.84 ± 8.42 min/year increase in sleep onset latency, P < 0.001; 1.27 ± 1.93%/year decrease in sleep efficiency, P < 0.001), whereas men maintained stable sleep parameters regardless of alignment.
Conclusions
Bedtime alignment represents a modifiable determinant of sleep health in older couples, with synchronised bedtimes providing optimal outcomes and partial sleep onset overlap creating disruption. This particularly benefits women, who show progressive deterioration with misalignment. These findings support the development of gender-informed, couple-based interventions for sleep disorders.
Early detection of respiratory decline is crucial in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). We tested if nocturnal polysomnography (PSG) predicts dyspnea onset in mild ALS patients with preserved daytime function.
Methods:
In this study, 41 mild ALS patients (ALS Functional Rating Scale-Revised [ALSFRS-R] ≥ 37, sitting forced vital capacity [FVC] ≥80% predicted, no dyspnea) and 41 matched controls underwent baseline assessment, including ALSFRS-R scoring, pulmonary function tests, and overnight PSG. ALS patients were followed for 12 months. Baseline apnea–hypopnea index (AHI) and oxygen saturation (mean SpO2, minimum SpO2) were analyzed as continuous predictors and using exploratory thresholds (AHI ≥ 5 events/h, min SpO2 ≤ 88%, mean SpO2 ≤ 95%) for dyspnea onset (Dyspnea-ALS-15 [DALS-15] > 0).
Results:
Compared to controls, ALS patients had significantly higher AHI (p = 0.004) and lower minimum SpO2 (p = 0.018). The ALSFRS-R orthopnea subscore showed a significant positive correlation with mean and minimum SpO2 (P < 0.05). Cox regression identified baseline AHI (HR 1.08 per event/h; 95% CI 1.01–1.15, p = 0.028) and minimum SpO2 (HR 0.94 per %; 95% CI 0.88–0.99, p = 0.033) as independent predictors of dyspnea onset within 12 months. Thresholds AHI ≥ 5 (HR 2.28, p = 0.031) and min SpO2 ≤ 88% (HR 2.42, p = 0.027) also predicted increased risk. Patients meeting ≥1 threshold (n = 25/37) showed trends toward greater FVC and ALSFRS-R decline.
Conclusions:
In patients with mild ALS and normal daytime function, specific nocturnal PSG parameters (AHI, minimum SpO2) predicted the risk of dyspnea within 12 months. This longitudinal study provides novel evidence that PSG could identify early respiratory vulnerability in the incipient stage, earlier than conventional FVC-based monitoring, supporting its potential utility in refining early intervention strategies. Validation in larger cohorts is warranted.
How flexible is an individual's accent during adulthood, and how does this flexibility relate to longer-term change? Previous work has found that accents are remarkably flexible in conversational interaction, but predominantly stable over years, leading to very different views of the role of individuals in community-level sound change. This article examines MEDIUM-TERM accent dynamics (days to months) by taking advantage of a ‘natural experiment’: a reality television show where contestants live in an isolated house for three months and are constantly recorded, forming a closed system where it is possible to both determine the dynamics of contestants’ speech from day to day and reason about the sources of any observed changes. We build statistical models to examine time dependence in five phonetic variables within individuals, in 14.5 hours of spontaneous speech from twelve English-speaking contestants. We find that time dependence in pronunciation is ubiquitous over the medium term: large daily fluctuations in pronunciation are the norm, while longer-term change over weeks to months occurs in a minority of cases. These patterns mirror the conflicting findings of previous work and suggest a possible bridge between the two. We argue that time dependence in phonetic variables is influenced by contrast between sounds, as well as systematic differences between speakers in how malleable their accents are over time; however, we find only limited evidence for convergence in individuals’ accents. Our results have implications for theories of the role of individuals in sound change, and suggest that medium-term pronunciation dynamics are a fruitful direction for future work.
This study aimed to investigate (1) the longitudinal associations between food patterns and body weight in young adulthood and (2) how food patterns of young adults relate to food consumption in early, middle and late childhood. The study sample includes 700 participants of the Québec Longitudinal Study of Child Development. During childhood, frequency of consumption of various foods was reported on ten occasions between 1·5 and 13 years. At age 22 years, food frequency questions (with quantities) were used to derive four food patterns (labelled healthy, beverage rich, protein rich and high energy density) through exploratory factor analysis. Self-reported height and weight were collected at 22 and 23 years. Regression analyses were performed to assess the associations between (1) food patterns and weight outcomes a year later (BMI, BMI change and overweight status) and (2) frequency of consumption of eight food groups in childhood and food patterns in adulthood. Dietary habits characterised by the consumption of vegetables, fruit, plant-based sources of protein and whole-grain cereal products were related to a lower risk of obesity a year later. Conversely, dietary habits characterised by a high consumption of energy-dense foods, of animal sources of proteins and, among women, of high quantities of liquids were associated with higher risk of excess weight a year later. Healthier food choices in childhood were associated with healthier food patterns in young adulthood. These findings reinforce the value of preventive dietary interventions in the early years to foster eating environments that favour healthy eating and healthy weights in adulthood.
This chapter explores the critical importance of child and adolescent mental health in understanding and mitigating mental illness across the life course. Because the majority of mental disorders emerge during childhood or adolescence, early mental health interventions are key to prevent long-term health burden. We emphasise the need for a developmental perspective in mental health research, highlighting the challenges and opportunities in studying both typical and atypical development, addressing diagnostic comorbidity, and evaluating environmental influences on mental health outcomes. We discuss four examples to illustrate the breadth of research in child and adolescent mental health: (1) conceptualising psychopathology across the lifespan, (2) establishing valid measures of childhood maltreatment to assess its impact on mental health, (3) testing the mechanisms that might explain why maltreatment contributes to the risk of psychopathology, and (4) optimising psychiatric crisis care for adolescents in the UK. By examining these critical issues, the chapter outlines how advances in child and adolescent mental health research can lead to innovative strategies for preventing and managing mental health problems, with the potential to improve wellbeing throughout the life course.
Research has robustly demonstrated that children exposed to early ecological adversity are at risk for developing antisocial, externalizing behavior problems (rule breaking, aggression, disregard for others). Yet, studies have also demonstrated multifinality in developmental pathways unfolding in adversity’s aftermath, with many children showing remarkable resilience. Understanding sources of such resilience is critical, especially across different populations (Luthar et al., 2006, 2015). In Family Study (FS, 102 low-risk mothers, fathers, and infants) and Play Study (PS, 186 high-risk mother-toddler dyads), we test a model of parent–child attachment security, observed at 15 months in FS and 2.5 years in PS, as a moderator of effects of early family ecological adversity, assessed as a cumulative score of sociodemographic risks (graded for severity) at 7 months in FS and 2.5 years in PS, on children’s antisocial, externalizing problems, observed and parent-reported at 5.5 years in FS and 7 years in PS. We supported moderation for mother–child relationships in both studies: Higher early family adversity was associated with more antisocial outcomes five years later, but only for children with less secure attachments. We highlight the key role of early security as a protective factor and a source of resilience for children in families experiencing adversity.
Children born very preterm (VPT; ≤32 weeks’ gestation) are at higher risk of developing behavioural problems, encompassing socio-emotional processing and attention, compared to term-born children. This study aimed to examine multi-dimensional predictors of late childhood behavioural and psychiatric outcomes in very preterm children, using longitudinal clinical, environmental, and cognitive measures.
Methods
Participants were 153 VPT children previously enrolled in the Evaluation of Preterm Imaging study who underwent neuropsychological assessments at 18–24 months, 4–7 years and 8–11 years as part of the Brain Immunity and Psychopathology following very Preterm birth (BIPP) study. Predictors of late childhood behavioural and psychiatric outcomes were investigated, including clinical, environmental, cognitive, and behavioural measures in toddlerhood and early childhood. Parallel analysis and exploratory factor analysis were conducted to define outcome variables. A prediction model using elastic-net regularisation and repeated nested cross-validation was applied to evaluate the predictive strength of these variables.
Results
Factor analysis revealed two key outcome factors in late childhood: externalising and internalising-socio-emotional problems. The strongest predictors of externalising problems were response inhibition, effortful control and internalising symptoms in early childhood (cross-validated R2=.256). The strongest predictors of internalising problems were autism traits and poor cognitive flexibility in early childhood (cross-validated R2=.123). Cross-validation demonstrated robust prediction models, with higher accuracy for externalising symptoms.
Conclusions
Early childhood cognitive and behavioural outcomes predicted late childhood behavioural and psychiatric outcomes in very preterm children. These findings underscore the importance of early interventions targeting cognitive development and behavioural regulation to mitigate long-term psychiatric risks in very preterm children.
To analyse the evolution of the vertigo index and its relationship with perceived disability in unilateral and bilateral Ménière’s disease, assessing differences based on disease progression and clinical subtypes.
Methods
A longitudinal descriptive study was conducted on unilateral and bilateral Ménière’s disease patients, with data collected between 1977 and 2023 from two referral centres. Clinical and functional data were retrospectively reviewed to ensure compliance with updated diagnostic criteria. The vertigo index, integrating episode duration and frequency, quantified vertigo burden. Functional impact was assessed using the six-item American Academy of Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery disability scale, categorising patients into mild or moderate/severe disability groups.
Results
Bilateral Ménière’s disease patients had a higher proportion of moderate/severe episodes (31.4 per cent) than unilateral Ménière’s disease patients (11 per cent). In unilateral Ménière’s disease patients, disability perception increased after 20 years of disease evolution. The vertigo index declined over time, except in later stages, where episodes were more disabling.
Conclusion
These findings underscore the need for long-term follow up, particularly in bilateral Ménière’s disease, where greater disability was observed. Disease management should adapt over time, addressing both vertigo burden and psycho-affective consequences.
This article explores the potentials of intergenerational collaboration as a long-term research strategy for shifting social and political imaginaries around climate change. It brings together academics and youth researchers who began working together on the Climate Change and Me project in 2014, along with colleagues who joined them for a public panel, book launch and exhibition ten years later. Climate Change and Me was the first large-scale study of climate change education applying a child- and youth-framed methodology, and has led to numerous exhibitions, curriculum resources, digital platforms, and publications co-created with children and young people. This article gives voice to young people’s reflections on the impact of their involvement with this project a decade on, drawing on the transcript of a public panel conversation at the Design Hub Gallery in Naarm (Melbourne). It explores how young people’s early experiences as child researchers have intersected with political, social and educational change across time, while opening new conversations with intergenerational colleagues working in related areas of climate justice education, activism and research.
Considering the demographic shift towards an ageing population, the financial threats that arise after retirement and the ongoing debates about extending working life, it is crucial to thoroughly understand the impact of retirement on the health of older individuals. This article presents a systematic review conducted according to the standards established by PRISMA statement CINAHL and APA PsycArticles databases by EBSCOhost, Pubmed, Scopus and Web of Science, for longitudinal studies published between 2013 and 2023. The aim of the review was to synthesise evidence of the effects of retirement on health, for example physical functioning, morbidity or mortality. From 1,757 records, 19 papers were included. Twelve longitudinal studies consistently linked retirement to declining physical function, increased disease prevalence and higher all-cause mortality risk. The evidence did not show a clear conclusion on biomarkers as health outcomes. The article identifies five explanatory mechanisms behind the retirement–health relationship: working conditions, retirement types, financial security, lifestyle changes and social participation. Retirement can have some adverse effects on health; however, the health consequences of withdrawal are likely to vary by pre-retirement factors. These findings carry implications for the current debate of extending working life and the social security system for older people.
To establish quick-reference criteria regarding the frequency of statistically rare changes in seven neuropsychological measures administered to older adults.
Method:
Data from 935 older adults examined over a two-year interval were obtained from the Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative. The sample included 401 cognitively normal older adults whose scores were used to determine the natural distribution of change scores for seven cognitive measures and to set change score thresholds corresponding to the 5th percentile. The number of test scores that exceeded these thresholds were counted for the cognitively normal group, as well as 381 individuals with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and 153 individuals with dementia. Regression analyses examined whether the number of change scores predicted diagnostic group membership beyond demographic covariates.
Results:
Only 4.2% of cognitively normal participants obtained two or more change scores that fell below the 5th percentile of change scores, compared to 10.6% of the stable MCI participants and 38.6% of those who converted to dementia. After adjusting for age, gender, race/ethnicity, and premorbid estimates, the number of change scores below the 5th percentile significantly predicted diagnostic group membership.
Conclusions:
It was uncommon for older adults to have two or more change scores fall below the 5th percentile thresholds in a seven-test battery. Higher change counts may identify those showing atypical cognitive decline.
The study aimed to describe trajectories of free sugar (FS) intake, its main sources and the associations with socio-economic status (SES) in Portuguese children/adolescents evaluated at 4, 7, 10 and 13 years of age from Generation XXI birth-cohort. Dietary intake was assessed through 3-day food diaries (n 5268). Added sugar intake was estimated following a systematic methodology, and FS was based on the WHO definition. A mixed-effects model with linear and quadratic terms for time was used to estimate FS trajectories and its association with SES, adjusting for children’s sex, age, BMI and SES. The FS mean intake (g/day) was 37, 47, 51 and 48 at 4, 7, 10 and 13 years, respectively. FS intake increased 4·6 g/year (CI 95 %: 4·20, 5·04), but velocity decreased by 0·3 g/year2 until 13 years. At all ages, the main food source was sweets. Some item’s consumption declined (sweets 25–21 % and yoghurts 22–7 %) as children grew older. Inversely, soft drink intake increased (9–18 %). Boys and children from younger mothers had higher FS intake, whereas higher maternal–SES was associated with lower children’s FS intake: occupational status (β = –3·5; 95 % CI: –4·97, –1·94), years of education (β = –3·7; 95 % CI: –4·93, –2·40) and household income (β = –4·9; 95 % CI: –6·50, –3·27). The FS trajectories were similar by SES categories but different by obesity status (interaction term β = –1·04; CI 95 % (–1·50, –0·59)). An increasing FS trajectory during childhood is mainly driven by an increasing intake of soft drinks and nectars. The FS trajectory pattern did not change according to SES categories, but children’s FS intake was always higher when their mothers had a lower SES.
Youth adversity is associated with persistence of depression and anxiety symptoms. This association may be greater for disadvantaged societal groups (such as females) compared with advantaged groups (e.g. males). Given that persistent symptoms are observed across a range of disadvantaged, minoritized, and neurodivergent groups (e.g. low compared with high socio-economic status [SES]), the intersection of individual characteristics may be an important moderator of inequality.
Methods
Data from HeadStart Cornwall (N = 4441) was used to assess the effect of youth adversity on combined symptoms of depression and anxiety (Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire emotional problems subscale) measured at three time-points in 11–14-year-olds. Latent trajectories and regressions were estimated for eight intersectionality profiles (based on gender, SES, and hyperactivity/inattention), and moderating effects of the individual characteristics and their intersections were estimated.
Results
Youth adversity was associated with higher average depression/anxiety symptoms at baseline (11–12-years) across all intersectionality profiles. The magnitude of effects differed across profiles, with suggestive evidence for a moderating effect of youth adversity on change over time in depression/anxiety symptoms attributable to the intersection between (i) gender and SES; and (ii) gender, SES, and hyperactivity/inattention.
Conclusions
The detrimental effects of youth adversity pervade across intersectionality profiles. The extent to which these effects are moderated by intersectionality is discussed in terms of operational factors. The current results provide a platform for further research, which is needed to determine the importance of intersectionality as a moderator of youth adversity on the development of depression and anxiety symptoms in adolescence.
Although the importance of the dynamic intra-individual relationship between mother-to-infant bonding and postpartum depressive symptoms has been widely recognized, the complex interplay between them is not well understood. Furthermore, the potential role of prenatal depressive symptoms and infant temperament in this relationship remains unclear. This study aims to examine the bidirectional influence of mother-to-infant bonding on postpartum depressive symptoms within individuals and to elucidate whether prenatal depressive symptoms and infant temperament would influence deviations from stable individual states.
Methods
Longitudinal data were collected from 433 women in early pregnancy. Of these, 360 participants completed the main questionnaires measuring impaired mother-to-infant bonding and postpartum depressive symptoms at least once during the postpartum period. Data were collected at early and late pregnancy and several postpartum time points: shortly after birth and at one, four, ten, and 18 months postpartum. We also assessed prenatal depressive symptoms and infant temperament. A random-intercept cross-lagged panel model was used.
Results
Within-individual variability in mother-to-infant bonding, especially anger and rejection, significantly predicted subsequent postpartum depressive symptoms. However, the inverse relationship was not significant. Additionally, prenatal depressive symptoms and difficult infant temperament were associated with greater within-individual variability in impaired mother-to-infant bonding and postpartum depressive symptoms.
Conclusions
The present study demonstrated that the within-individual relationship between mother-to-infant bonding and postpartum depressive symptoms is likely non-bidirectional. The significance of the findings is underscored by the potential for interventions aimed at improving mother-to-infant bonding to alleviate postpartum depressive symptoms, suggesting avenues for future research and practice.
Attentional impairments are common in dementia with Lewy bodies and its prodromal stage of mild cognitive impairment (MCI) with Lewy bodies (MCI-LB). People with MCI may be capable of compensating for subtle attentional deficits in most circumstances, and so these may present as occasional lapses of attention. We aimed to assess the utility of a continuous performance task (CPT), which requires sustained attention for several minutes, for measuring attentional performance in MCI-LB in comparison to Alzheimer’s disease (MCI-AD), and any performance deficits which emerged with sustained effort.
Method:
We included longitudinal data on a CPT sustained attention task for 89 participants with MCI-LB or MCI-AD and 31 healthy controls, estimating ex-Gaussian response time parameters, omission and commission errors. Performance trajectories were estimated both cross-sectionally (intra-task progress from start to end) and longitudinally (change in performance over years).
Results:
While response times in successful trials were broadly similar, with slight slowing associated with clinical parkinsonism, those with MCI-LB made considerably more errors. Omission errors were more common throughout the task in MCI-LB than MCI-AD (OR 2.3, 95% CI: 1.1–4.7), while commission errors became more common after several minutes of sustained attention. Within MCI-LB, omission errors were more common in those with clinical parkinsonism (OR 1.9, 95% CI: 1.3–2.9) or cognitive fluctuations (OR 4.3, 95% CI: 2.2–8.8).
Conclusions:
Sustained attention deficits in MCI-LB may emerge in the form of attentional lapses leading to omissions, and a breakdown in inhibitory control leading to commission errors.
Chapter 10 discusses various characteristics of the overall developmental progression of language acquisition. We first discuss some general properties of this process and then show how it can be studied both with respect to language production and language perception. We discuss the stages and milestones that children go through for different aspects of grammar and ask whether the properties and timing of stages lend support to the Innateness Hypothesis for language. We then formulate the argument from stages. Here the idea is that a complex system like language “unfolds” in the human mind, step by step, each step occurring at more or less regular points in time, as determined by a biological clock. This process of unfolding is called maturation. Just as our body gradually changes into a mature system, so does our mind. This process of unfolding is biologically determined and largely outside the control of the organism, although external factors (“nurture“) play a role. We critically evaluate the argument from stages, asking how precisely it might support the Innateness Hypothesis.
To examine how food insecurity in childhood up to adolescence relates to eating habits and weight status in young adulthood.
Design:
A longitudinal study design was used to derive trajectories of household food insecurity from age 4·5 to 13 years. Multivariable linear and logistical regression analyses were performed to model associations between being at high risk of food insecurity from age 4·5 to 13 years and both dietary and weight outcomes at age 22 years.
Setting:
A birth cohort study conducted in the Province of Quebec, Canada.
Participants:
In total, 698 young adults participating in the Québec Longitudinal Study of Child Development.
Results:
After adjusting for sex, maternal education and immigrant status, household income and type of family, being at high risk (compared with low risk) of food insecurity in childhood up to adolescence was associated with consuming higher quantities of sugar-sweetened beverages (ßadj: 0·64; 95 % CI (0·27, 1·00)), non-whole-grain cereal products (ßadj: 0·32; 95 % CI (0·07, 0·56)) and processed meat (ßadj: 0·14; 95 % CI (0·02, 0·25)), with skipping breakfast (ORadj: 1·97; 95 % CI (1·08, 3·53)), with eating meals prepared out of home (ORadj: 3·38; 95 % CI (1·52, 9·02)), with experiencing food insecurity (ORadj: 3·03; 95 % CI (1·91, 4·76)) and with being obese (ORadj: 2·01; 95 % CI (1·12, 3·64)), once reaching young adulthood.
Conclusion:
Growing up in families experiencing food insecurity may negatively influence eating habits and weight status later in life. Our findings reinforce the importance of public health policies and programmes tackling poverty and food insecurity, particularly for families with young children.