How Early Social Deprivation Impairs Long-Term Cognitive Function
From the 17 September 2012 article at Medical News Today
A growing body of research shows that children who suffer severe neglect and social isolation have cognitive and social impairments as adults. A study from Boston Children’s Hospital shows, for the first time, how these functional impairments arise: Social isolation during early life prevents the cells that make up the brain’s white matter from maturing and producing the right amount of myelin, the fatty “insulation” on nerve fibers that helps them transmit long-distance messages within the brain…
…
When isolation occurred during a “critical period,” starting three weeks after birth, cells called oligodendrocytes failed to mature in the prefrontal cortex, a brain region important for cognitive function and social behavior. As a result, nerve fibers had thinner coatings of myelin, which is produced by oligodendrocytes, and the mice showed impairments in social interaction and working memory.
Related articles
- How early social deprivation impairs long-term cognitive function (sciencedaily.com)
- Study shows how early social deprivation impairs long-term cognitive function (medicalxpress.com)
- How early social deprivation impairs long-term cognitive function (terradaily.com)
- How social deprivation during early childhood impairs brain functions (indiavision.com)
- How early social deprivation impairs long-term cognitive function (eurekalert.org)
- Mystery of how social isolation affects brain solved (cbsnews.com)
- Early Isolation Impairs Brain Connections (news.sciencemag.org)