Article on effects of
neglect on vasopressin and
oxytocin in young children
adopted from orphanages.
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publication
Psychologists glimpse
biological imprint of
childhood neglect
November 21, 2005
by Paroma Basu
The absence of a loving
caregiver in the earliest
years of life could sway the
normal activity of two
hormones - vasopressin and
oxytocin - that play an
essential role in the
ability to form healthy
social bonds and emotional
intimacy.
Announced by psychologists
at UW-Madison, the new
finding demonstrates for the
first time that severe
neglect and social isolation
can directly affect a young
child's neurobiology in ways
that potentially influence
emotional behaviors. The
work is reported online in
the Nov. 21, 2005
Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences.

Psychologist Seth Pollak
and doctoral student
Alison Wismer Fries have
for the first time shown
that two 'social
bonding' hormones can
potentially run awry
when young children
suffer emotional and
physical neglect in the
earliest years of life.
The researchers
monitored hormone levels
in children before and
after they played an
animated and interactive
computer game, while
sitting in the lap of
either their mother or
an unfamiliar woman.
"Questions about how
children regulate
emotions and form social
bonds has not really
made contact with recent
advances in the
neurosciences," says
senior author
Seth Pollak,
a UW-Madison professor
of psychology,
psychiatry and
pediatrics and
researcher at the
Waisman Center for Human
Development.
"But this work makes a
link between complex
emotional behaviors and
the developing brain."
"It's exciting that we've
taken an area of child
development that has been
very descriptive and can now
look at it in a more
mechanistic way," adds
doctoral student Alison
Wismer Fries, the lead
author of the study.
The UW-Madison work emerges
at a time when families in
the developed world are
adopting children
internationally in record
numbers. Orphanages in
developing nations, however,
are often overwhelmed by the
numbers of children in their
care. Many adopted children
who lived in such
orphanages, consequently,
spent some part of their
early years without the
emotional and physical
contact that is so critical
for social development.
Crucial to making the link
between social behavior and
hormones was the work of
co-author
Toni Ziegler,
an endocrinologist at the
UW-Madison
National Primate Research
Center,
who developed a technique
that enables researchers to
track vasopressin and
oxytocin levels through the
analysis of urine. The
procedure is far less
invasive than the existing
method of analyzing blood or
cerebrospinal fluid, and may
one day find applications in
several areas of child
research such as the field
of autism, Ziegler says.
The UW-Madison scientists
worked with 18 four-year-old
children who had lived in
Russian and Romanian
orphanages before being
adopted into homes in the
Milwaukee area. Despite the
fact that the children now
live in stable homes - for
over three years, in some
cases - they might still
display some of the telltale
behaviors that researchers
have come to associate with
early neglect. The abnormal
willingness of a child to
seek comfort from unfamiliar
adults, even in the presence
of the adopted parent, is
one common instance of such
behavior, says Wismer Fries.
Before starting her
experiment, Wismer Fries
collected urine samples from
the young subjects to track
baseline levels of
vasopressin and oxytocin.
Immediately, the scientists
noticed that the children
who experienced early
neglect had markedly lower
levels of vasopressin than
the control group of
non-adopted children.
Researchers believe that
vasopressin is essential for
recognizing individuals in a
familiar social environment.
Lower levels of the hormone,
Pollak says, may point to
the social deprivation these
children endured early on.
During the experiment, study
subjects sat on the laps of
either their mother or an
unfamiliar woman and
participated in an animated
interactive computer game.
The 30-minute game directed
the children to engage in
various types of physical
contact with the adult they
were sitting with, such as
whispering or tickling each
other, and patting each
other on the head. When the
game ended, Wismer Fries
collected another urine
sample from each child.
The UW-Madison researchers
expected to see a hormonal
response in the children
following the physical
contact with their mothers.
And predictably, oxytocin
levels rose in family-reared
subjects. Yet, levels stayed
the same among the
previously neglected group.
That result may help explain
the difficulties many of
these children have in
forming secure
relationships, the
UW-Madison scientists say.
What is important to note,
Pollak points out, is that
the study results do not
suggest that victims of
early neglect are
biologically barred from
forming healthy
relationships later in life.
"It's extremely important
that people don't think this
work implies that these
children are somehow
permanently delayed," says
Pollak. "All we are saying
is that in the case of some
social problems, here is a
window into understanding
the biological basis for why
they happen and how we might
design treatments."
In the future, Pollak and
Wismer Fries hope to
identify how particular
factors, such as the
duration or severity of
childhood neglect, might
influence types of child
behavior. Why hormone levels
vary between children who've
suffered similar neglect
patterns is another
potential area of
exploration.
File last updated:
October 18, 2006
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© 2005 Board of Regents
of the
University of Wisconsin
System