Tuesday, February 28, 2023

Tiny worm plays a big role in learning whether Parkinson’s really starts in the gut


Grant and Award Announcement

MEDICAL COLLEGE OF GEORGIA AT AUGUSTA UNIVERSITY

Tiny worm plays a big role in learning whether Parkinson’s really starts in the gut 

IMAGE: DANIELLE MOR, PHD view more 

CREDIT: MICHAEL HOLAHAN, AUGUSTA UNIVERSITY

AUGUSTA, Ga. (Feb. 28, 2023) – A tiny worm called the C. elegans is enabling scientists to explore the emerging theory that Parkinson’s disease starts in the gut.

Key to the condition known to produce uncontrollable shaking, but also characterized by cognitive problems and gastrointestinal distresses like constipation, is a sticky, toxic form of the protein alpha-synuclein, which literally gums up the works of our neurons and kills them.

Although it may seem counterintuitive, there is evidence from science labs like Neuroscientist Danielle Mor’s, PhD, that the toxic protein aggregates in the neurons in the gut before it interferes with neurons in the brain. The collection of destructive alpha-synuclein, called Lewy bodies, also has been found on autopsy in neurons embedded in the wall of the gastrointestinal tract of patients with early Parkinson’s.

“This is now a hot area of research,” says Mor, a faculty member in the Department of Neuroscience and Regenerative Medicine at the Medical College of Georgia at Augusta University. “I think we need to be intervening at the stage of the gut and that is honestly pretty exciting.”

It’s known that neurons in the gut regularly communicate with those in the brain and vice versa but just how the alpha-synuclein gets messed up in both is another uncertainty.

Still in animal models, scientists like Mor have watched the sticky wads get spit out of one neuron and get taken up by the next. They’ve also watched the sticky wads in the gut travel up the spinal cord into the brain. It appears this unfortunate sharing occurs primarily between neurons that already connect and communicate, says Mor.

She just received a two-year $400,000 Early-Investigator Research Award from the U.S. Department of Defense that is helping her learn more about the effects of gut-derived alpha-synuclein on cognition, how it gets inside neurons and whether there are existing drugs that can deter the cognitive impact.  

Mor is among the first scientists to look at how alpha-synuclein in the gut affects cognition. And the transparent-throughout-life C. elegans are a great model for pursuing answers, Mor says.

These nematodes, or roundworms, despite their size of about .039 inches, have a gene number and gene pool similar to humans. They also have a digestive tract and many of the same neurotransmitters as humans. Neurotransmitters are chemical messengers that enable neurons to communicate like acetylcholine, associated with memory and learning, and dopamine, which is involved in helping you feel positive emotions like satisfaction and pleasure and helping us plan our movement. Dopamine is known to be substantially depleted in Parkinson’s. In fact, a healthy balance between dopamine and acetylcholine is thought to be lost in Parkinson’s and to play a major role in the uncontrolled movement that typically characterizes the condition. The death of neurons that produce dopamine is a major focus in Parkinson’s research.

Also, like humans the worms have an alimentary nervous system, which is basically a network of neurons in the gut that coordinate functions like digestion and nutrient absorption, and where Mor thinks the early alpha-synuclein first congregates and why she developed her worm models.  

“Here we have new models, we are modeling gut-to-brain alpha-synuclein transmission, which we believe is one potential way that this disease occurs in humans and now we will test cognitive function. Now we will test learning and memory in these worms,” Mor says.

Previous worm models for Parkinson’s have the worms expressing human alpha-synuclein in the neurons in the brain. Mor decided to start by feeding a toxic version of the human protein to the worms. She saw it spread to the brain and the resulting degeneration of dopamine neurons in the worms’ brains over just a few days.

“I have seen that it spreads to their different body tissues, and I have seen the neurons degenerating and I have seen the worm have motor problems in a matter of days,” Mor says. She notes that a few days is a long time for the worms whose lifespan is just two to four weeks.

For the newly funded studies, she is focusing on the cognitive problems that often surface later in Parkinson’s. So as the destructive alpha-synuclein travels from gut to brain she is testing learning and memory in the worms, which she says, again seemingly counterintuitively, is not that tough to do.

“They can learn association between a lot of different things,” Mor says. In this case she is focusing on associating a strong, perfumy odor with food. Butanone, a colorless organic compound often used as an industrial solvent, provides the odor and bacteria is a favorite worm food. The C. elegans make the association in about an hour but it’s a short-term memory.

“Once they associate that odor with food they move toward that odor,” she says. “That is how we give them the quiz.” One of the questions she wants to answer is whether feeding the worms the protein aggregate she’s watched travel to the brain reduces their association and their scores.

She also wants to better understand how alpha-synuclein gets inside neurons in the gut. There is some evidence, at least in culture, that the toxic protein binds to a sugar coating on the cells, called proteoglycans, which works like a receptor and the alpha-synuclein gets taken up by that unsuspecting neuron.

She’s already knocked down a few genes in the pathway that makes the sugar coating, which reduced destruction of dopamine neurons and alleviated some of the disease symptoms in the worms.

“We think we are blocking alpha-synuclein from actually getting into the cells,” Mor says, and now her lab is looking more directly at whether that is correct. Right now, they are knocking down 17 genes related to proteoglycans that they suspect as playing a role to begin to identify the ones that actually do.

To speed the identification of drugs that might help and getting that help to people, she is doing high throughput screening of drugs already out there and approved by the Food and Drug Administration. Rather than targeting alpha-synuclein, she wants drugs that will help correct the downstream toxicity of the protein that disrupts normal neuron metabolism and function and ultimately leads to their death.

“We think cellular metabolism is a key feature of how the neurons are dying,” Mor says. She notes that others are conducting monoclonal antibody studies against the protein itself, but the results are not yet known.

Her new worm models are complementary to existing mouse models developed with this gut-to-brain approach but unlike these mouse models, her worm model is faster for the large-scale manipulations needed at this juncture to parse the problem, she says.

Although the usual role of alpha-synuclein is not crystal clear, neurons naturally have a lot of the protein, which appears to have an important role in maintaining biological suitcases called vesicles, that in this case help neurons communicate, and neurons do a lot of communicating.

The path of “gut to brain” in Parkinson’s is consistent with exposures to environmental toxins in the food or water or in warzones or from other occupational exposures.  “We should know if we are endangering ourselves and right now, we don’t know,” Mor says.  

Another possibility is that the gut microbiome, which has important functions like helping regulate metabolism and our immune response in addition to helping digest food, could get out of balance by the food we eat or medicines we take or even stress. The reality is there could be multiple ways alpha-synuclein becomes problematic, she says.  

Cognitive decline in patients tends to occur later in Parkinson’s and has a high degree of variability. Loss of smell and sleep problems   are other symptoms.

Physician Scientist Chandramohan Wakade, MBBS, associate dean of research in the AU College of Allied Health Sciences, and Erhard Bieberich, PhD, biochemist at the University of Kentucky College of Medicine, are mentors for Mor on the new grant.

12 exotic bacteria found to passively collect rare earth elements from wastewater

‘Biosorption’ of rare earth elements by biomass of novel strains of

 cyanobacteria is fast and efficient, allowing recycling

Peer-Reviewed Publication

FRONTIERS

Rare earth elements (REEs) are a group of 17 chemically similar metals, which got their name because they typically occur at low concentrations (between 0.5 and 67 parts per million) within the Earth’s crust. Because they are indispensable in modern technology such as light emitting diodes, mobile phones, electromotors, wind turbines, hard disks, cameras, magnets, and low-energy lightbulbs, the demand for them has increased steadily over the past few decades, and is predicted to rise further by 2030.

As a result of their rarity and the demand they are expensive: for example, a kilo of neodymium oxide currently costs approximately €200, while the same amount of terbium oxide costs approximately €3,800. Today, China has a near-monopoly on the mining of REEs, although the discovery of promising new finds (more than one million metric tons) in Kiruna, Sweden was announced with great fanfare in January 2023.

Circular economy

The advantages of moving from a wasteful ‘linear’ economy to a ‘circular’ economy, where all resources are recycled and reused, are obvious. So could we recycle REEs more efficiently, too?

In Frontiers in Bioengineering and Biotechnology, German scientists showed that the answer is yes: the biomass of some exotic photosynthetic cyanobacteria can efficiently absorb REEs from wastewater, for example derived from mining, metallurgy, or the recycling of e-waste. The absorbed REEs can afterwards be washed from the biomass and collected for reuse.

“Here we optimized the conditions of REE uptake by the cyanobacterial biomass, and characterized the most important chemical mechanisms for binding them. These cyanobacteria could be used in future eco-friendly processes for simultaneous REE recovery and treatment of industrial wastewater,” said Dr Thomas Brück, a professor at the Technical University of Munich and the study’s last author.

Highly specialist strains of cyanobacteria

Biosorption is a metabolically passive process for the fast, reversible binding of ions from aqueous solutions to biomass. Brück and colleagues measured the potential for biosorption of the REEs lanthanum, cerium, neodymium, and terbium by 12 strains of cyanobacteria in laboratory culture. Most of these strains had never been assessed for their biotechnological potential before. They were sampled from highly specialized habitats such as arid soils in Namibian deserts, the surface of lichens around the world, natron lakes in Chad, crevices in rocks in South Africa, or polluted brooks in Switzerland.

The authors found that an uncharacterized new species of Nostoc had the highest capacity for biosorption of ions of these four REEs from aqueous solutions, with efficiencies between 84.2 and 91.5 mg per g biomass, while Scytonema hyalinum had the lowest efficiency at 15.5 to 21.2 mg per g. Also efficient were Synechococcus elongatesDesmonostoc muscorumCalothrix brevissima, and an uncharacterized new species of Komarekiella. Biosorption was found to depend strongly on acidity: it was highest at a pH of between five and six, and decreased steadily in more acid solutions. The process was most efficient when there was no ‘competition’ for the biosorption surface on the cyanobacteria biomass from positive ions of other, non-REE metals such as zinc, lead, nickel, or aluminium.

The authors used a technique called infrared spectroscopy to determine which functional chemical groups in the biomass were mostly responsible for biosorption of REEs.

“We found that biomass derived from cyanobacteria has excellent adsorption characteristics due to their high concentration of negatively charged sugar moieties, which carry carbonyl and carboxyl groups. These negatively charged components attract positively charged metal ions such as REEs, and support their attachment to the biomass,” said first author Michael Paper, a scientist at the Technical University of Munich.

Fast and efficient, with great potential for future applications

The authors conclude that biosorption of REEs by cyanobacteria is possible even at low concentrations of the metals. The process is also fast: for example, most cerium in solution was biosorbed within five minutes of starting the reaction.

“The cyanobacteria described here can adsorb amounts of REEs corresponding to up to 10% of their dry matter. Biosorption thus presents an economically and ecologically optimized process for the circular recovery and reuse of rare earth metals from diluted industrial wastewater from the mining, electronic, and chemical-catalyst producing sectors,” said Brück.

“This system is expected to become economically feasible in the near future, as the demand and market prizes for REEs are likely to rise significantly in the coming years,” he predicted.

Study reveals improvements in workplace support and leadership training will improve the mental health and potentially reduce burnout in healthcare professionals

Peer-Reviewed Publication

QUEEN MARY UNIVERSITY OF LONDON

Amongst healthcare professionals, the feeling of being supported in the workplace can protect them against adverse mental health and burnout, according to a new study published in CMAJ Open by researchers at Queen Mary University of London and medical staff at various hospitals across the UK.

CoPE-HCP study was designed, during the early part of COVID-19 pandemic, when there was great concern for the mental health of healthcare professionals with no scientifically-proven mitigating strategies to reduce that impact. Funded by Barts Charity, this new longitudinal study found that feeling unsupported at work was associated with an increased risk of depression, anxiety, insomnia, burnout, and mental wellbeing, compared to those who felt supported. Interestingly, when these people were followed up, those with improved feelings of workplace support were also shown to have improvements in symptoms of depression, anxiety, and mental wellbeing over time.

The study involved two online surveys assessing the rates of depression, anxiety, insomnia, burnout, and low mental wellbeing. In both surveys, it was concerning that 22% of healthcare professionals felt unsupported in the workplace, which rose to one in four (25%) HCPs feeling this just a few months later. Compared to those who felt unsupported, those who felt supported had a decreased risk of depression (58% reduction and 56% reduction at baseline and follow-up, respectively), anxiety (58% reduction and 39% reduction), insomnia (42% reduction and 54% reduction), emotional exhaustion (65% reduction and 55% reduction), and a 3-fold increased risk of good mental wellbeing. Furthermore, improved perceptions of workplace support was associated with reduced depression and anxiety symptoms, and increased mental wellbeing symptoms over the four month period.

The survey also allowed participants to state what types of support they felt were effective or desired. Five overarching themes were generated relating to 1) concern or recognition regarding welfare, 2) information, 3) tangible qualities of the workplace, 4) leadership, and 5) peer support.

Dr Ajay Gupta, senior author, chief investigator and Clinical Reader at Queen Mary and Honorary Consultant in Clinical Pharmacology and Cardiovascular Medicine, said: “This important study not only demonstrates the consistent association between workplace support and mental health and burnout in healthcare professionals, but for the first time it shows that the feeling of being supported significantly protects them against developing mental health problems, such as depression and anxiety. We have furthermore demonstrated what constitutes effective workplace support- simple things such as increased visibility of senior leaders and approachability can do wonders, aside from other measures. These findings will be able to inform significant changes in the workplace guidance targeted at improving mental wellbeing in healthcare professionals”.

The study is among the first to evaluate the relationship between changes in feeling supported at work and changes in mental health and burnout over time in healthcare professionals, and identifies the specific workplace aspects valuable to protecting their mental health during pandemics.

Many healthcare professionals in the study desired managers who listened and left staff feeling understood, and they valued consistent clear and transparent information sent on a timely manner. Additionally, adequate staffing was highly important, and qualities such as visible and approachable leadership, and camaraderie and solidarity amongst peers were also valuable.

New insights from an ancient asteroid


TOHOKU UNIVERSITY

Figure 1 

IMAGE: ELECTRON MICROSCOPE IMAGES OF A CHONDRULE-LIKE OBJECT AND CAI IN THE RYUGU SAMPLES. view more 

CREDIT: TOHOKU UNIVERSITY

In June 2018, Japan's Hayabusa2 spacecraft retrieved samples from asteroid Ryugu and successfully returned them to Earth. Researchers at Tohoku University have analysed the samples and identified what they believe may be the oldest solids from the solar system that have thus far become available for study. They reported their findings in the journal Nature Communications on February 16, 2023. The article was also selected to feature in the Editors' Highlights. 

The work was focused on spherical mineral grains, called chondrule-like objects and calcium-aluminium-rich inclusions (CAIs). These grains are key components of chondritic meteorites, which are delivered to Earth from the asteroid belt without being modified by processes, such as melting, that can affect other meteorites. The samples from Ryugu gave scientists the opportunity to study material freshly gathered from an asteroid that, at the time of sampling, was around 15,000,000 kilometres from Earth. But surprising evidence from the investigations of the samples by many research teams has suggested that Ryugu was initially formed much further from Earth, in the outer reaches of the solar system. 

A key finding from the analysis by the Tohoku University group is that the grains in the Ryugu samples were likely transported in widening circles from the inner regions of the early solar system out to the much more distant region where the original asteroid Ryugu formed. 

The team's conclusions are partly based on analysing the ratio of different oxygen isotopes in the samples. These are forms of oxygen atoms with varying masses due to differing numbers of neutrons in their nuclei. The lower mass oxygen-16 isotope has one less neutron than oxygen-17 and two fewer than oxygen-18. Many of the Ryugu grains were enriched in oxygen-16. The isotope content, together with analysis of the grains' sizes and mineral composition, led the researchers to suggest their ancient origin and likely transport outwards to the far regions of the solar system, where they became part of a body that then fragmented to form asteroid Ryugu. 

"We now want to analyse more of these oldest solar system solids in Ryugu, to try to understand the mechanisms behind the radial transport outwards in the early solar nebula," says geochemist Daisuke Nakashima of the early Solar System Research Group at Tohoku University. Nakashima and colleagues collaborated on the investigation with researchers elsewhere in Japan and the USA. 

"This is fundamental research into the ancient events that built our solar system," says Nakashima. The work is part of the fascinating process of understanding how the planetary system that eventually gave rise to life on Earth was itself born. 

How to predict city traffic


COMPLEXITY SCIENCE HUB VIENNA
Mobility in Milan 

IMAGE: DIFFERENT MOBILITY PATTERNS FOR DIFFERENT ZONES OF THE CITY OF MILAN DURING WORKING DAYS view more 

CREDIT: © COMPLEXITY SCIENCE HUB AND SONY CSL

A new machine learning model can predict traffic activity in different zones of cities. To do so, a Complexity Science Hub researcher used data from a main car-sharing company in Italy as a proxy for overall city traffic. Understanding how different urban zones interact can help avoid traffic jams, for example, and enable targeted responses of policy makers - such as local expansion of public transportation.

 

Understanding people's mobility patterns will be central to improving urban traffic flow. “As populations grow in urban areas, this knowledge can help policymakers design and implement effective transportation policies and inclusive urban planning”, says Simone Daniotti of the Complexity Science Hub

For example, if the model shows that there is a nontrivial connection between two zones, i.e., that people commute from one zone to another for certain reasons, services could be provided that compensate for this interaction. If, on the flip side, the model shows that there is little activity in a particular location, policymakers could use that knowledge to invest in structures to change that.

MODEL ALSO FOR OTHER CITIES LIKE VIENNA

For this study a major car-sharing company provided the data: the location of all cars in their fleet in four Italian cities (Rome, Turin, Milan, and Florence) in 2017. The data was obtained by constantly querying the service provider's web APIs, recording the parking location of each car, as well as the start and end timestamps. "This information allows us to identify the origin and destination of each trip," Daniotti explains. 

Daniotti used that as a proxy for all city traffic and created a model that not only allows accurate spatio-temporal forecasting in different urban areas, but also accurate anomaly detection. Anomalies such as strikes and bad weather conditions, both of which are related to traffic. 

The model could also make predictions about traffic patterns for other cities such as Vienna. "However, this would require appropriate data," Daniotti points out.

OUTPERFORMING OTHER MODELS

While there are already many models designed to predict traffic behavior in cities, "the vast majority of prediction models on aggregated data are not fully interpretable. Even though some structure of the model connects two zones, they cannot be interpreted as an interaction" explains Daniotti. This limits understanding of the underlying mechanisms that govern citizens' daily routines.

Since only a minimal number of constraints are considered and all parameters represent actual interactions, the new model is fully interpretable.

BUT WHAT IS PREDICTION WITHOUT INTERPRETATION?

"Of course it is important to make predictions," Daniotti explains, "but you can make very accurate predictions, and if you don't interpret the results correctly, you sometimes run the risk of drawing very wrong conclusions." 

Without knowing the reason why the model is showing a particular result, it is difficult to control for events where the model was not showing what you expected. “Inspecting the model and understanding it, helps us, and also policy makers, to not draw wrong conclusions,” Daniotti points out.

FIND OUT MORE:

The study “A maximum entropy approach for the modelling of car-sharing parking dynamics” has been published in Scientific Reports.

ABOUT THE COMPLEXITY SCIENCE HUB

The mission of the Complexity Science Hub (CSH Vienna) is to host, educate, and inspire complex systems scientists dedicated to making sense of Big Data to boost science and society. Scientists at the Complexity Science Hub develop methods for the scientific, quantitative, and predictive understanding of complex systems.

The CSH Vienna is a joint initiative of AIT Austrian Institute of Technology, Central European University CEU, Danube University Krems, Graz University of Technology, Medical University of Vienna, TU Wien, VetMedUni Vienna, Vienna University of Economics and Business, and Austrian Economic Chambers (WKO). https://www.csh.ac.at

Making drinking water bacteria-free

Efficient disinfection of water with silver sulfide quantum dots in a peptide coat


WILEY

Water contaminated with bacteria is a large threat to global health. A Chinese research team has described a simple new method of disinfection in the journal Angewandte Chemie. It is based on tiny biocompatible assemblies of atoms, known as quantum dots, made of silver sulfide with caps made of a silver-binding peptide. When irradiated with near-infrared light, they kill bacteria in water with high efficiency through synergistic effects.

Particularly in developing nations and remote regions of the world, it can be very difficult to access clean drinking water. Pathogenic bacteria, such as E. coli, enterococci, salmonella, or cholera pathogens, can cause serious infections. A single swallow can sometimes have fatal consequences. Traditional disinfection methods widely implemented in recent decades, such as UV light, chlorination, and ozone, have disadvantages, including high costs, poor efficiency, poor biocompatibility, and carcinogenic by-products. An alternative is needed.

A team led by Xushen Qiu, Wei Wei, and Jing Zhao has now introduced a new method that is based on quantum dots made of silver sulfide (Ag2S). Quantum dots are nanoscopic structures made of about one-to-ten thousand atoms that are “confined” in space. Their quantum-mechanical properties correspond more to those of molecules than macroscopic solids, which can lead to interesting opto-electronic effects.

Silver sulfide quantum dots are already used in photodynamic and photothermic therapy, including for the treatment of certain tumors and skin diseases. They can be used as contrast agents and as fluorescence thermometers. So far, they have not been used much for disinfecting water, partly because previous methods for preparing them have been complicated and expensive. The team from Nanjing University and the Nanchuang (Jiangsu) Institute of Chemistry and Health has now developed a simple, inexpensive production method, in which the quantum dots are enclosed by caps made from a specially developed biomimetic silver-binding peptide (AgBP2).

When irradiated with near-infrared (NIR) light, the new AgBP2-Ag2S quantum dots effectively kill bacteria in water. They are chemically stable, photostable, and biocompatible. Their strong activity is due to a synergistic combination of two effects. First, irradiation causes them to produce highly reactive oxygen species, and second, they cause strong local heating. Neither of the two effects alone leads to success, but their synergistic combination effectively destroys bacterial cell membranes. They are able to kill over 99 % of E. coli bacteria within 25 minutes of NIR irradiation—a highly promising strategy for antibacterial disinfection of water.

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About the Author

Dr. Jing Zhao is a Professor at Nanjing University in Chemical Biology. His main specialty is bioinorganic chemistry, especially metallodrug development and the synthetic biology of long-chain biopolymers.

Parental support for LGBTQ youth is important, research shows

Peer-Reviewed Publication

SOCIETY FOR RESEARCH IN CHILD DEVELOPMENT

Depression is more widespread among lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, or questioning (LGBTQ) youth than heterosexual, cisgender youth, making parental support more important for these adolescents. A new study released in Child Development by researchers at The University of Texas at Austin looks at parental social support and psychological control in relation to depressive symptoms for LGBTQ youth in the United States. Psychological control attempts to intrude into the psychological and emotional development of the child (e.g., thinking processes, self-expression, emotions, and attachment to parents). Although adolescence can be a sensitive period for stress exposure, it also provides opportunities to provide support that may prevent or help mental health symptoms, making parenting practices an important factor in the mental health of all adolescents. Previous research on LGBTQ youth and their parents has focused on acceptance and rejection specific to LGBTQ identity rather than general parenting practices that are known to shape adolescent development.  

“Our research showed that those who felt greater social support from parents tended to have fewer depressive symptoms, whereas those who reported greater psychological control from parents had more depressive symptoms,” as explained by Amy McCurdy, postdoctoral scholar at The University of Texas at Austin. “For youth whose parents did not know their LGBTQ identities, having a combination of high psychological control and high social support from parents was linked with greater depressive symptoms.”

The current study analyzes data from the first two waves of a longitudinal study of sexual and gender minority youth which was designed to investigate risk factors for suicide. Data were collected at four consecutive periods, beginning in November 2011, each nine months following the preceding collection. Participants were recruited from community-based organizations and college groups located throughout three cities in the Northeast, West Coast and Southwest United States. Participants aged 15-21 years old who self-identified as LGBTQ were eligible. The sample included:

  • 536 LGBTQ youth (252 men, 258 women, 26 identified as another gender). Just over 35% of participants identified as bisexual, 34% as gay, 20% as lesbian, 6.7% as questioning and 2.4% heterosexual/straight (and identified as transgender or gender diverse). Data were missing on 1.5% participants. 
  • Twenty-five percent of participants reported their race as Black or African American, 24.4% as multiracial or another race, 22.6% as White or European American, 6.0% as Asian American or Pacific Islander, and this information was not reported by 21.8%, 37.1% of participants reported their ethnicity as Hispanic or Latino/a/x, whereas 53.9% reported their ethnicity as not Hispanic or Latino/a/x; 8.9% (n = 48) did not report this information. 
  • The majority of youth were from the Northeast site (56.7%), 23.8% from the Southwest site, and 19.4% from the West Coast site.  

The principal investigators received a federal certificate of confidentiality that allowed youth to participate without requiring parental consent, due to concerns that requiring parental approval would put some youth at risk of exposing their sexual orientation and/or gender identity. Youth under 18 years met with a youth advocate to receive more information about the study to ensure informed consent to participate. After the initial screening, eligible participants contacted site coordinators to confirm an appointment to complete a survey packet. Participants completed the survey packet at the selected study site, which took between 40 – 80 minutes to complete. Participants also received a cash incentive in exchange for their participation.

Researchers examined youth’s reports on the following:

  • Parental Social Support: Youth reported on and rated the frequency of parents’ specific support behaviors such as: “My parents show they are proud of me,” “My parents tell me I did a good job when I do something well,” and “My parents help me practice my activities.”
  • Parental Psychological Control:  Youth responded to questions about their parent’s psychological control behaviors such as “My caregivers tell me that their ideas are correct and that I should not question them,” “My caregivers act cold and unfriendly if I do something they don’t like,” and “My caregivers won’t let me do things with them when I do something they don’t like.” 
  • Parent Knowledge of LGBTQ Identity: Youth reported on mothers’ and father’s knowledge of their LGBTQ identity by answering the question “Do the people listed below know that you are LGBTQ?” for mothers (adoptive mother, foster mother, stepmother, etc.) and fathers (adoptive father, foster father, stepfather, etc.) and responding with “Definitely not,” “Probably not,” “Probably,” “Definitely.” 
  • Depressive Symptoms: Participants were asked to rate the frequency of thoughts and feelings they experienced in the past 2 weeks. Example items include, “I have trouble doing things” and “I have trouble sleeping” with options ranging from “Never” to “Always.” 
  • Covariates: Youth reported their sexual, gender, race, and ethnic identities, age, and whether they received free or reduced-price lunch at school.

The research shows that general parenting practices matter for the wellbeing of LGBTQ youth. The study also shows that psychological control is a particularly important predictor of youth depressive symptoms yet psychological control is seldom studied among LGBTQ youth. The findings also highlight the complexity of parenting experiences for LGBTQ youth, particularly those who may not be out to their parents. This research was inconsistent with a previous study conducted in Israel which found that the significant main effect of parental acceptance on youth depressive symptoms vanished when parental psychological control was entered into the model. Unlike a previous study conducted with LGBTQ youth in Israel, both parental support and psychological control simultaneously predicted youth depressive symptoms – the influence of one did not overpower the influence of the other.  

“Research on parental acceptance and rejection has produced important initiatives that improve the well-being of sexual and gender minority youth,” said McCurdy. “Advancing understandings of the associations between parenting practices and youth well-being offers possibility for insights regarding risk and resilience mechanisms and ultimately support positive mental health outcomes for sexual and gender minority youth during adolescence.”

The authors acknowledge several limitations in their research including a reliance on self-reported data, generalizability of the sampling frame, and timeframe differences in key study measures.  A deeper understanding of parenting practices is also needed in future research to inform efforts to identify and intervene in mechanisms of risk for sexual and gender minority youth.

###

This work was funded by the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development at the National Institutes of Health.

Summarized from Child Development, Perceived parental social support and psychological control predict depressive symptoms for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, or questioning youth in the United States by McCurdy A.L. and Russell S.T. (The University of Texas at Austin). Copyright 2023 The Society for Research in Child Development, Inc. All rights reserved. 

“What a wonderful day, I’m so happy!” Research shows how children learn emotion labels through parents’ speech

Peer-Reviewed Publication

SOCIETY FOR RESEARCH IN CHILD DEVELOPMENT

Learning about emotions is an important part of children’s social and communicative development. Whether children can use words like “happy” or “sad” to talk about emotions predicts how well they get along with their peers, self-soothe after a negative event, and thrive at school. A study released in Child Development by researchers at Princeton University in New Jersey, United States examined language production and input among English-speaking toddlers to assess whether emotion labels (such as “happy,” which directly name an internal emotional state) might help children learn their meaning. The team explored the emergence of valenced (i.e., positive and negative) words in children’s productive vocabulary and how parents and caregivers may support young children’s learning of emotion labels. The research suggests that young children use the dynamics of language input to construct emotion word meanings and provides new techniques for defining the quality of infant-directed speech.

“Our research shows that children are more likely to know a given emotion label when they also know many other related valenced words,” said Mira Nencheva, a graduate student in psychology at Princeton University “If parents surround emotion labels with related words, they may support children’s learning. For example, when introducing the label happy, a parent or caregiver can provide information about the situation or actions that surround the emotion (such as Rosa got a wonderful present for her birthday! She was so happy!).”

Researchers used data collected in North America and the United Kingdom between 1962 and 2009, from the MacArthur-Bates Communicative Development Inventory Wordbank database. Across five studies, they analyzed vocabularies of 5,520 toddlers (1,989 female and 2, 2015 male) between the ages of 16 and 30 months. sixteen- and thirty-months. 2,202 identified as White, 67 as Asian, 222 as Black, 131 as Hispanic, and 93 as Other. The Wordbank database asked caregivers to report which 680 words their child understands and speaks. The words included in the database were selected to represent children’s first words. 

The data were examined using the following steps: 

  • In Studies 1 and 2, researchers examined the development of 1- to 2-year-olds' valenced words and looked at the rate in which they learned emotional and neutral words. 
  • The research helped reveal that learning starts with concrete neutral words (i.e., spoon or shake) and then expanded to positive and negative words. 

This is consistent with previous research which showed that older children learn negative and positive words earlier than neutral, abstract words. 

  • Study 3 examined how caregivers use emotion labels within context that match in valence. 
  • Study 4 investigated whether variability in the extent to which different emotion labels lend themselves to such co-occurrence in child-directed speech predicts earlier or later production.
  • Study 5 examined the longitudinal hypothesis that children produce emotion labels in more accurate contexts when their caregivers surround emotion labels with similar words.

Studies 3, 4 and 5 show that caregiver input may include consistent links between emotion labels and similarly valenced words, which may facilitate children’s learning over time. In all, the research shows that it may be important for caregivers to provide related words when labeling emotions to help children make sense of complex words. The findings also have implications for understanding children’s word learning beyond emotion labels and related valenced words. 

“Our five studies provide insight into how young children may use dynamic language input to construct complex meanings,” said Nencheva. “It is our intent that our approach will help enable other researchers to quantify how caregivers dynamically use words that support children’s learning of words with complex, abstract meanings.” 

The authors acknowledge several limitations in their research. For some of the analyses, they were limited by the words included in the MacArthur-Bates Communicative Development Inventory Wordbank database which included very few emotion labels. The questionnaire was also specifically designed for infants and toddlers so future research across a wider age range from infancy to childhood to adolescence is recommended. Future research should directly study the causal links between caregiver input in using emotional labels and similary-valenced words and children’s learning over time. Finally, the parent-report measures of their child’s productive vocabulary are not as robust as children-driven measures of production and comprehension. 

 

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This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health and the Association for Computing Machinery Special Interest Group on High Performance Computing of the Association for Computing Machinery Computational & Data Science Fellowship.

Summarized from Child Development, Caregiver speech predicts the emergence of children’s emotion vocabulary by Nencheva, M., Tamir, D., and Lew-Williams, C. (Princeton University). Copyright 2023 The Society for Research in Child Development, Inc. All rights reserved.