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7 - Pre- and Postnatal Environmental Effects on Learning to Read and Mathematical Learning

from Part III - Genetic and Environmental Influences

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 July 2022

Michael A. Skeide
Affiliation:
Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences
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Summary

The foundations of academic abilities in reading and mathematics are established early in life, long before formal schooling begins. One major source that impacts the outcome of academic abilities is the prenatal (or antenatal) and postnatal environment. Exposures during prenatal or postnatal development that cause permanent changes to the biology and outcome of an individual are known as ‘developmental programming’ (Sutton et al. 2016). These exposures include but are not limited to drugs, alcohol, maternal psychosocial stress, and teratogens such as pollutants. Earlier studies of pre- and postnatal environmental impact on the brain and behaviour have primarily focused on outcome measures such as mortality, physical growth, and internalizing and externalizing neurodevelopmental disorders. Later studies have, however, begun to focus on more fine-grained cognitive as well as academic outcomes, and their neural correlates, notably as cognitive and academic performance provide important measures of life outcome, including future well-being, health, and employment (OECD Education Working Papers). Thus far, links have been identified through animal models and epidemiological, prospective, and intervention studies in humans to identify the causal relationships and underlying mechanisms.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2022

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References

Suggestions for Further Reading

Pulli, E. P., Kumpulainen, V., Kasurinen, J. H., et al. 2019. ‘Prenatal Exposures and Infant Brain: Review of Magnetic Resonance Imaging Studies and a Population Description Analysis’. Hum Brain Mapping 40: 19872000.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Morie, K. P., Crowley, M. J., Mayes, L. C., and Potenza, M. N.. 2019. ‘Prenatal Drug Exposure from Infancy through Emerging Adulthood: Results from Neuroimaging’. Drug and Alcohol Dependence May 1, 198: 3953.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
McBryde, M, Fitzallen, G. C., Liley, H. G., Taylor, H. G., and Bora, S.. 2020. ‘Academic Outcomes of School-Aged Children Born Preterm: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis’. JAMA Network Open 3 (4): e202027.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
D’Onofrio, B. M., Class, Q. A., Rickert, M. E., et al. 2016. ‘Translational Epidemiologic Approaches to Understanding the Consequences of Early-Life Exposures’. Behavior Genetics 46, 315–28.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Van den Bergh, B. R. H., van den Heuvel, M. I., Lahti, M., et al. 2020. ‘Prenatal Developmental Origins of Behavior and Mental Health: The Influence of Maternal Stress in Pregnancy’. Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews Oct, 117: 2664.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed

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