Does timing matter? Investigating preconception stress exposure in relation to infants' memory and emotional development

Past research revealed the importance of preconception care in influencing infants’ birth outcomes. Specifically, works on maternal preconception stress arising from extreme experiences (bereavement, trauma) propose that stress occurring within six months of pregnancy may uniquely impact infant deve...

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Main Author: Low, Grace Jing Hwee
Other Authors: Setoh Pei Pei
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/168473
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1684732023-06-18T15:32:06Z Does timing matter? Investigating preconception stress exposure in relation to infants' memory and emotional development Low, Grace Jing Hwee Setoh Pei Pei School of Social Sciences Anne Rifkin-Graboi psetoh@ntu.edu.sg, anne.rifkin@nie.edu.sg Social sciences::Psychology::Affection and emotion Past research revealed the importance of preconception care in influencing infants’ birth outcomes. Specifically, works on maternal preconception stress arising from extreme experiences (bereavement, trauma) propose that stress occurring within six months of pregnancy may uniquely impact infant development, more so than the prenatal period. However, little knowledge is available on whether this unique period remains crucial when considering less extreme experiences, such as poor mental health, and perceived stress levels from daily activities. Here, we examine whether COVID-related stressors, in addition to the timing at which mothers were exposed to the peak of COVID-related stress, predict infants’ memory and emotional development in a sample of 66 mother-infant dyads. Infants were assessed on their memory for relations between an “item” and its spatial location, and between happy and angry stimuli, while mothers provided retrospective data on stress levels experienced at different timepoints of the COVID pandemic. Results indicate significant main effects of poor maternal mental health and preconception period, and marginally significant main effects of daily stressors on infants’ differential attention towards familiar and novel associations. Overall interaction between poor mental health and preconception period was significant, with post-hoc analyses (p < .10) suggesting that the relationship was only significant when exposure to stress was experienced relatively closer to conception. Findings are discussed in consideration of possible alterations in infant brain development due to maternal stress, and infants’ birth into an unprecedented pandemic. It also highlights the preconception period as a possible intervening timepoint for improved developmental outcomes. Bachelor of Social Sciences in Psychology 2023-06-13T05:47:59Z 2023-06-13T05:47:59Z 2023 Final Year Project (FYP) Low, G. J. H. (2023). Does timing matter? Investigating preconception stress exposure in relation to infants' memory and emotional development. Final Year Project (FYP), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/168473 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/168473 en SSRTG 2/21 AR application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social sciences::Psychology::Affection and emotion
spellingShingle Social sciences::Psychology::Affection and emotion
Low, Grace Jing Hwee
Does timing matter? Investigating preconception stress exposure in relation to infants' memory and emotional development
description Past research revealed the importance of preconception care in influencing infants’ birth outcomes. Specifically, works on maternal preconception stress arising from extreme experiences (bereavement, trauma) propose that stress occurring within six months of pregnancy may uniquely impact infant development, more so than the prenatal period. However, little knowledge is available on whether this unique period remains crucial when considering less extreme experiences, such as poor mental health, and perceived stress levels from daily activities. Here, we examine whether COVID-related stressors, in addition to the timing at which mothers were exposed to the peak of COVID-related stress, predict infants’ memory and emotional development in a sample of 66 mother-infant dyads. Infants were assessed on their memory for relations between an “item” and its spatial location, and between happy and angry stimuli, while mothers provided retrospective data on stress levels experienced at different timepoints of the COVID pandemic. Results indicate significant main effects of poor maternal mental health and preconception period, and marginally significant main effects of daily stressors on infants’ differential attention towards familiar and novel associations. Overall interaction between poor mental health and preconception period was significant, with post-hoc analyses (p < .10) suggesting that the relationship was only significant when exposure to stress was experienced relatively closer to conception. Findings are discussed in consideration of possible alterations in infant brain development due to maternal stress, and infants’ birth into an unprecedented pandemic. It also highlights the preconception period as a possible intervening timepoint for improved developmental outcomes.
author2 Setoh Pei Pei
author_facet Setoh Pei Pei
Low, Grace Jing Hwee
format Final Year Project
author Low, Grace Jing Hwee
author_sort Low, Grace Jing Hwee
title Does timing matter? Investigating preconception stress exposure in relation to infants' memory and emotional development
title_short Does timing matter? Investigating preconception stress exposure in relation to infants' memory and emotional development
title_full Does timing matter? Investigating preconception stress exposure in relation to infants' memory and emotional development
title_fullStr Does timing matter? Investigating preconception stress exposure in relation to infants' memory and emotional development
title_full_unstemmed Does timing matter? Investigating preconception stress exposure in relation to infants' memory and emotional development
title_sort does timing matter? investigating preconception stress exposure in relation to infants' memory and emotional development
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2023
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/168473
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