Self-regulatory deficits are common across a variety of childhood psychiatric disorders in which children have difficulty regulating their thoughts, emotions, and behaviors. By leveraging previously collected prenatal and neonatal data and acquiring new data from mother-infant dyads, this study will identify circuit-based markers of regulatory deficits that are passed inter-generationally, and persist from infancy to childhood. We will enroll 15- 45 year-old pregnant women/mothers, approximately 75% Latina, who are receiving health care from our ur- ban medical center, a sample that is underrepresented in U.S. biomedical research and facing significant psy- chosocial adversity. Age-appropriate measures of regulatory control processes will be acquired from their off- spring at 4- and 14-months and during preschool and school age, including resting-state fMRI data from neo- nates and both resting and task-based fMRI data from school-aged children who were previously scanned as neonates. Behavioral measures of regulatory capacity and resting and task-based fMRI will also be acquired from the mothers, allowing us to associate maternal-neonatal indices of self-regulatory control. Thus, this study will uncover trajectories of control processes and circuits from infancy to school age and the intergenerational transmission of regulatory deficits from mothers to offspring. Findings will set the stage for future research aimed at engaging these circuits as targets for strategies to prevent the risk for future maladaptive behaviors and at identifying prenatal mechanisms underlying the intergenerational transmission of regulatory deficits, such as epigenetic and stress-mediated biological alterations. This study supports the NIMH strategic objective to chart mental illness trajectories to determine when, where, and how to intervene by elucidating the develop- ment of regulatory control across the first decade of life. This study also supports both the NIH BRAIN and pre- cision medicine initiatives by evaluating the functional organization of control circuits across family generations and longitudinally, as well as using a novel imaging method to predict behavioral outcomes.

Public Health Relevance

Self-regulatory deficits are common across a variety of childhood psychiatric disorders in which children have difficulty regulating their thoughts, emotions, and behaviors. This study will identify circuit-based markers of regulatory deficits that are passed inter-generationally and persist from infancy to childhood. The study will set the stage for future research aimed at engaging these circuits as targets for prevention strategies.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
3R01MH117983-03S1
Application #
10151330
Study Section
Child Psychopathology and Developmental Disabilities Study Section (CPDD)
Program Officer
Zehr, Julia L
Project Start
2018-09-01
Project End
2023-06-30
Budget Start
2020-07-06
Budget End
2021-06-30
Support Year
3
Fiscal Year
2020
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Columbia University (N.Y.)
Department
Psychiatry
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
621889815
City
New York
State
NY
Country
United States
Zip Code
10032