Journal article
Developmental programming of happiness
Abstract
Being born at an extremely low birth weight (ELBW; <1,000 grams) is presumed to reflect a suboptimal intrauterine environment and thus presents an opportunity for examining developmental programming hypotheses. Interfacing prenatal programming and differential susceptibility hypotheses, we tested whether individuals with ELBW in different childhood rearing environments showed different attention biases to positive and negative facial emotions in adulthood. Using the oldest known, prospectively followed cohort of ELBW survivors, we found that relative to normal birth weight controls (NBW; >2,500 grams), ELBW survivors displayed the highest and lowest attention bias to happy faces at age 30-35, depending on whether their total family income at age 8 was relatively low (environmental match) or high (environmental mismatch), respectively. This bias to happy faces was associated with a reduced likelihood of emotional problems. Findings suggest that differential susceptibility to …1,000>
Authors
Schmidt LA; Fortier P; Lahat A; Tang A; Mathewson KJ; Saigal S; Boyle MH; Van Lieshout RJ
Journal
Developmental Psychobiology, Vol. 59, No. 6, pp. 715–722
Publisher
Wiley
Publication Date
September 2017
DOI
10.1002/dev.21524
ISSN
0012-1630