Abstract

A rapidly accumulating literature indicates that the prenatal period must be taken into account if we are to understand development of the central nervous system (CNS) across the life span. Evidence now suggests that intrauterine signals influence brain structure and affect cognitive function and emotional and physiological stress regulation in the offspring. Furthermore, prenatal hormone exposures are critical for priming the maternal brain for the challenges of motherhood and have implications for the mother’s brain structure and function that may last the rest of her lifetime. Just as the reciprocal nature of the parent–child relationship must be understood during the postnatal period, in order to understand the persisting influences of the intrauterine environment on neurodevelopment, the effects of the prenatal environment on both fetus and mother, as well as their reciprocal influences, must be appreciated. This is critical because the same hormones that program fetal development are those that shape the maternal brain and because prenatal bidirectional signaling may provide an adaptive function for both mother and fetus.

Highlights

  • Each developing organism plays an active role in its own construction (Denver, 1997)

  • Most existing human studies of prenatal influences on development rely on retrospective designs in which birth phenotype is determined archivally and is used to predict adult health

  • The obvious limitations with this approach are that the prenatal environment cannot be characterized accurately and that it cannot be separated from the deleterious effects of being born early or small

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Summary

Introduction

Each developing organism plays an active role in its own construction (Denver, 1997). Fewer studies have examined the effects of prenatal stress on human cognitive development. Instead of assuming that pathology is the only outcome of fetal exposure to adversity, the predictive adaptive response (PAR) model proposes that the developing organism makes adjustments based on the predicted postnatal environment.

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