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Connecting inside out: Development of the social brain in infants and toddlers with a focus on myelination as a marker of brain maturation

Nora Schneider, Elizabeth Greenstreet, Sean Deoni

2021Child Development31 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Early childhood is a sensitive period for learning and social skill development. The maturation of cerebral regions underlying social processing lays the foundation for later social-emotional competence. This study explored myelin changes in social brain regions and their association with changes in parent-rated social-emotional development in a cohort of 129 children (64 females, 0-36 months, 77 White). Results reveal a steep increase in myelination throughout the social brain in the first 3 years of life that is significantly associated with social-emotional development scores. These findings add knowledge to the emerging picture of social brain development by describing neural underpinnings of human social behavior. They can contribute to identifying age-/stage-appropriate early life factors in this developmental domain.

Topics & Concepts

PsychologySocial competenceDevelopmental psychologyBrain developmentSocial emotional learningSocial changeChild developmentEarly childhoodSocial cognitionCohortNeuroscienceCognitionInternal medicineEconomicsEconomic growthMedicineNeonatal and fetal brain pathologyNeuroendocrine regulation and behaviorStress Responses and Cortisol