Monday, November 25, 2024

Psychotic-like experiences in adolescents linked to depression and self-destructive behaviour


NOT RELATED TO CANNABIS USE


University of Helsinki




Psychotic-like experiences resemble symptoms of psychosis, but are milder, less frequent and much more common than psychotic disorders. While these symptoms do not constitute a disorder diagnosed as psychosis, they can still be disruptive, distressing or detrimental to functional capacity. Typical psychotic-like experiences include perceptual distortions and hallucinations, suspicious paranoid thinking, delusions and bizarre, unusual thoughts.

According to a study recently completed by researchers in adolescent psychiatry at the University of Helsinki and HUS Helsinki University Hospital, psychotic-like experiences are abundant among adolescents referred to care, but are generally considered fairly neutral, with only some of the adolescents reporting them as frightening, worrisome or harmful. In the study, the correlation between psychotic-like experiences and depressive symptoms turned out to be strong. This link was not explained by connections between individual psychotic-like experiences and depressive symptoms, but by factors that more broadly measure paranoia and unusual thoughts. In addition to depressive symptoms, paranoid thoughts and unusual thought content were also associated with self-destructive thinking.

Making questions about psychotic-like experiences part of care

The findings show that psychotic-like experiences should be systematically surveyed in all adolescents seeking psychiatric care. It should also be assessed how frightening, worrisome or harmful they are considered to be. Particularly in the case of responses emphasising bizarre thinking and exaggerated suspiciousness, attention should also be paid to assessing mood and self-destructive thinking, as these factors can remain hidden without further enquiry.

“Our findings provide a clear recommendation for treatment practices: psychotic-like experiences should be assessed as part of routine procedures, but it is also important to determine how they are perceived. These phenomena cannot be uncovered unless separately and systematically asked,” says the principal investigator, Docent Niklas Granö.

It should be clearly explained to adolescents and their families that these symptoms are common and often manageable. In addition, applications of cognitive psychotherapy, even brief interventions, can help adolescents understand their symptoms and alleviate the strain they cause.

“The assessment and treatment of adolescent mental health has been entirely underresourced in Finland. Now, the launch and development of operations by the new wellbeing services counties offers a great opportunity to develop psychiatric care for adolescents and take into consideration the assessment and potential treatment, even in the short term, of common symptoms that are often excluded from systematic assessment,” says Granö.

Related research articles:
Prevalence of psychotic-like experiences and their association with depression symptoms among patients entering adolescent psychiatric care. Granö, Lintula, Therman, Marttunen, Edlund & Ranta. Nordic Journal of Psychiatry, 2024

Factor and network analysis of psychosis-like experiences and depressive symptoms in a sample of Finnish adolescents entering psychiatric services. Granö, Lintula, Therman, Marttunen, Lång & Ranta. PubMed 2023.

 

Virtual game day? UGA study explores sports in the metaverse



Interacting with others, unique virtual experiences valued in shared digital spaces




University of Georgia




Virtual reality and the metaverse are setting the stage for new ways to watch sporting events. A new study from the University of Georgia suggests that users value the unique virtual interactions with others offered by digital events.

The metaverse refers to digital shared spaces that operate in real time. It’s highly immersive and allows people from all over the world to interact in the same virtual space.

The study focused on a metaverse-based stream of the 2022 FIFA World Cup, how it was viewed by participants and what would drive them to join a similar event again.

It’s an experience you cannot get in real life …. the metaverse allows more people to access this type of content.” —Sam Chen, College of Education

The researchers found that spectators enjoyed interacting with others, the ability to easily change seats and locations and customizing their avatars. Metaverse-based events were also easier to join than those in real life.

“It’s an experience you cannot get in real life because that’s the World Cup, right? It’s very expensive if you want to get front-row tickets,” said Sam Chen, lead author of the study and doctoral student at UGA’s Mary Frances Early College of Education. “This immersive feature of the metaverse allows more people to access this type of content.”

Connecting with others a major draw of the metaverse

Participants watched the World Cup in a virtual stadium and saw the players on the field, mirroring the experience of watching the game in real life.

But in the metaverse, users could also switch seats or move to other locations, such as a virtual sports bar. That’s typically not an option at in-person events.

The researchers found that interacting with others in the metaverse was the most important thing to participants.

“In the metaverse, we can communicate and use our own voice, and the people nearby will hear,” said Chen. “We can also communicate by typing text or emojis, and other users can see those above our avatars. And we can communicate via our avatar’s body language, such as waves.”

The ability to communicate with others in the experience was a driving force for participants who said they would participate in similar events in the future.

Users also enjoyed the opportunity to reconnect with distant friends and build new friendships in the virtual space.

Spectators can watch events in ways they can’t in the real world

Metaverse-based events let people experience sports in new ways, not only through communication but through the digital space itself.

When going to an event in real life, audiences are bound to the ticket they’ve purchased. Attendees can only sit in their assigned seat, and they often aren’t able to reenter the venue if they leave.

In the metaverse, users can sit wherever they wish in the stadium and even go on the field.

“They can take a selfie with their avatar and their favorite player,” said Chen. “This kind of experience you cannot get from other online digital platforms.”

Participants can also change environments rather than staying in the stadium. If they wanted to go to another location to watch the game, they could leave at any time and return to the stadium later.

And users can customize their avatars, such as having their virtual figure wear their favorite team’s jersey. This increases fans’ sense of belonging and engagement.

The experience is as important as the game

Previous research on sporting events suggested that the game itself was the main factor driving attendance. If the game was enjoyable, researchers thought participants would be more likely to come back for another one in the future.

But the present study suggests that in the metaverse, the game itself may no longer be the primary motivator for attendance; instead, organizers must focus on the entire user experience.

“Users expect more than the game itself in the metaverse,” said Chen. “The environment of the metaverse — like the use of avatars, the virtual interactions, the stream quality — they’re all equally important as the core product.”

The study was published in Sport Management Review and co-authored by James J. Zhang of UGA’s Department of Kinesiology.

Here’s something Americans agree on: Sports build character

Belief in the ‘Great Sport Myth’ may be problematic



Ohio State University


COLUMBUS, Ohio – In a polarized nation, there is one thing that nearly all Americans agree on, according to a recent study: Sports are good for us.

Researchers from The Ohio State University and Ithaca College found that more than 9 out of 10 Americans agreed that sports build character and improved one’s health, while 84% agreed playing sports makes one popular in school and 85% said it makes one more well-known in the community.

According to 67% of those surveyed, playing sports even leads to better grades in school.

While these beliefs may seem harmless, they suggest that most Americans endorse what is called the “Great Sport Myth,” said Evan Davis, lead author of the study and assistant professor of sport management at Ithaca College.

“There are a lot of issues and problems in sports, but the Great Sport Myth glosses over them and says that sports are inherently good and pure,” Davis said.

Some youth who play sports face mistreatment including abuse and bullying, while even more experience burnout, unequal access to some sports and facilities, and other issues, said study co-author Chris Knoester, professor of sociology at Ohio State.

“The Great Sport Myth says that the positive results from sports are automatic – you just have to roll out the ball and good things are going to happen,” Knoester said. “That’s not true, but a large majority of Americans appear to buy into that.”

The study was published recently in the Journal of Sport and Social Issues.

It is true that sports can have many benefits for those who participate, the researchers said. The issue is to make sure that people don’t get so blinded by the good things about sports that they ignore the problems.

For example, previously published Ohio State research links youth sports participation with better mental health in adulthood. But the benefits were only apparent for those who continued to play sports throughout childhood. Most youth sports participants reported dropping out of sports and commonly said they did so because it was not fun, they were not a good enough player, they did not get along with the coach or teammates, they became injured, or they did not have enough money.

These findings underline that the benefits of sports depend on the situational contexts of them, including the presence of positive, healthy interactions and inclusive cultures, Knoester said.

The Great Sport Myth is a concept developed and introduced in 2015 by influential sport sociologist Jay Coakley, a professor emeritus at the University of Colorado-Colorado Springs.

The purpose of this new study was to use a large national survey to assess and analyze the extent to which U.S. adults endorse two essential components of the myth: the assumed personal development and social capital benefits of playing sports.

Survey data came from the National Sports and Society Survey (NSASS), sponsored by Ohio State’s Sports and Society Initiative.

The survey was completed by 3,993 adults who volunteered to participate through the American Population Panel, run by Ohio State’s Center for Human Resource Research. Participants, who came from all 50 states, answered the survey online between the fall of 2018 and spring of 2019.


Because NSASS participants are disproportionately female, white and college graduates, the researchers weighted the survey results to reflect the U.S. population more accurately.

The results showed that the majority of Americans thought sports helped people’s character, health, grades, popularity in school and recognition in the community.

But the findings also showed that various groups that people belonged to, their position in society and experiences with sports all played a role in how much they agreed with these key components of the Great Sport Myth.

The researchers found that Black Americans were more likely than white Americans to embrace aspects of the myth. That makes sense, Davis said.

“It seems as if, in the Black community, sports are often viewed in a positive light and have historically been seen as a unique way to get ahead in society,” he said.

Knoester said one particularly intriguing finding was that the more children a study participant had, the more likely he or she endorsed the elements of the Great Sport Myth.

“This might have to do with the extent that children really immerse parents in sports cultures, as they take their kids to soccer practices or other sports activities,” Knoester said.

“It seems to really encourage parents to believe in how good sports are for their children.”

Christians and conservatives were more likely to embrace the benefits of sports participation for personal development and gaining popularity in the community. Heterosexuals were more positive than those who identified as sexual minorities, and men were more positive than women and those who are nonbinary.

Not surprisingly, people who said they grew up in communities high in passion for sports and who became bigger sports fans and participants were also more likely to believe in aspects of the Great Sport Myth. But people who reported being mistreated in their sports interactions, such as being subject to cruel comments or more extreme forms of abuse, were less enthusiastic about the benefits of sports.

The researchers also analyzed how combinations of these different factors were linked to feelings about the value of sports.

Based on their answers to questions about family and community exposure to sport, immersions in sport cultures, and beliefs about the values of sports, Davis and Knoester compared those who had more negative involvement and low involvement in sports compared to those who had more positive and high involvement in sports.

Results showed an enormous difference – more than 70 percentage points – in the probability between these two groups that respondents would strongly agree that sports build character.

“It is the people who are most immersed in these sports cultures that have the greatest belief in elements of this myth,” Knoester said. “But they may also be less likely to be critical of the problems that are going on.”

Davis added: “What makes the Great Sport Myth a myth is that it’s become the preferred story about sport. If you ask people how they feel about sports, they immediately go to the positives but rarely consider the negatives.

The focus should be on the context of how sports are operating in each situation, Knoester added.

“Sports often do good things, but it is important to be critical and take the time to assess our sports environments to make sure we are really getting the best outcomes that sports can produce.”

Journal

Journal of Sport and Social Issues

DOI

10.1177/01937235241293718

Method of Research

Data/statistical analysis

Subject of Research

People

Article Title

U.S. Public Opinion About the Personal Development and Social Capital Benefits of Sport: Analyzing Components of the Great Sport Myth


More people can survive sports-related cardiac arrest



University of Gothenburg
Matilda Frisk Torell 

image: 

Matilda Frisk Torell, Sahlgrenska Academy at the University of Gothenburg.

 

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Credit: Photo by Andreas Claesson




Most cases of cardiac arrest during sport are likely to be preventable. In addition, the emergency response with cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) and defibrillators within the sports context can be improved. This has been shown in a thesis from the University of Gothenburg.

Swedish ambulance services report around 6,000 cases of sudden cardiac arrest annually. These are people who are not hospitalized but fall ill at home, at work or in other contexts. Of these, around 400 are affected within the context of sport.

In a thesis at Sahlgrenska Academy at the University of Gothenburg, Matilda Frisk Torell, PhD student and Cardiologist, has taken a closer look at e.g., emergency assistance and prognoses for people who suffer sudden cardiac arrest during sports.

The chances of survival were found to be significantly better for sports-related cardiac arrest, especially if it occurred in a sports and training facility. In this group, survival 30 days after the event was 56%, compared with 12% for out-of-hospital cardiac arrest in general.

Late or no defibrillation

Early CPR and defibrillation with an automated external defibrillator, AED, are crucial, but it still took at least 10 minutes before an available AED was used. Despite the fact that a majority (73%) of those who suffered a cardiac arrest at a sports facility had an acute cardiac arrhythmia, known as ventricular fibrillation, where the defibrillator can be the difference between life and death, only 14% of the youngest, up to 35 years old, were connected to a public defibrillator before the ambulance arrived.

“We have the opportunity to further increase survival rates if more sports facilities and other places where people play sports are equipped with public defibrillators and if more people learn to recognize cardiac arrest, know how to perform CPR and can use the defibrillator,” says Matilda Frisk Torell.

Her thesis also shows that sports-related cardiac arrest was rare among women, accounting for only 9% of the cases, and that women fared worse. The survival rate at 30 days after cardiac arrest during sports was 30% for women and almost 50% for men.

Dare to perform CPR

Likely explanations for the difference in survival are that women were more likely to exercise with fewer people around them, and that it took longer to start CPR. Matilda Frisk Torell adds:

“We observed that it took significantly longer to start CPR in women, which shows that we need to be better at recognizing sports-related cardiac arrests in women and that we need to dare to start CPR. More studies are also needed to investigate how women participate in sport and whether there are differences in the underlying causes.

Among young people who died of sudden cardiac arrest due to a primary arrhythmia, half had pre-existing symptoms and one fifth had ECG changes before the cardiac arrest. Fainting and seizures are important symptoms to react upon.

“Young people who play sports at an elite level should undergo screening, including ECG. Then we have a chance to catch those individuals with an increased risk of sudden cardiac arrest so that they can be advised on continued sports and possible treatment,” concludes Matilda Frisk Torell.

Thesis: Sudden cardiac arrest in relation to exercise, https://hdl.handle.net/2077/82300


 

Spinning fusion fuel for efficiency



Aligning the quantum property known as spin for fusion fuels could make it easier to generate electricity economically



DOE/Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory

An artist’s interpretation of spin-aligned atoms during the process of fusion. 

image: 

An artist’s interpretation of spin-aligned atoms during the process of fusion. 

 

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Credit: Kyle Palmer / PPPL Communications Department




A different mix of fuels with enhanced properties could overcome some of the major barriers to making fusion a more practical energy source, according to a new study

The proposed approach would still use deuterium and tritium, which are generally accepted as the most promising pair of fuels for fusion energy production. However, the quantum properties of the fuel would be adjusted for peak efficiency using an existing process known as spin polarization. In addition to spin polarizing half the fuels, the percentage of deuterium would be increased from the usual amount of roughly 60% or more. 

Models created by scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL) showed the approach allowed tritium to burn more efficiently without sacrificing fusion power. This could dramatically reduce the amount of tritium needed to start up and maintain fusion reactions, leading to more compact and affordable fusion systems.

“Fusion is really, really hard, and nature doesn’t do you many favors,” said Jason Parisi, a staff research physicist at the Lab and first author on the research paper. “So, it was surprising how big the improvement was.”

The paper, which was published in the journal Nuclear Fusion, suggests the approach could burn tritium as much as 10 times more efficiently. The research also underscores PPPL’s role at the forefront of fusion innovation, particularly when it involves a system such as the one studied in Parisi’s research, where gasses are superheated to create a plasma confined by magnetic fields into a shape similar to a cored apple. The Lab’s primary fusion device, the National Spherical Torus Experiment - Upgrade (NSTX-U), has a similar shape to the one the researchers considered when they tested their approach.

“This is the first time researchers have looked at how spin-polarized fuel could improve tritium-burn efficiency,” said staff research physicist and co-author Jacob Schwartz

Minimizing tritium requirements by maximizing burn efficiency

PPPL principal research physicist and co-author of the paper Ahmed Diallo likens tritium-burn efficiency to the efficiency of a gas stove. “When gas comes out of a stove, you want to burn all the gas,” Diallo said. “In a fusion device, typically, the tritium isn’t fully burned, and it is hard to come by. So, we wanted to improve the tritium-burn efficiency.”

The PPPL team consulted the fusion community and the broader community involved in spin polarization as a part of their work to find ways to enhance tritium-burn efficiency. “Fusion is one of the most multidisciplinary areas of science and engineering. It requires progress on so many fronts, but sometimes there are surprising results when you combine research from different disciplines and put it together,” Parisi said.

A different kind of spin

Quantum spin is very different from the physical spin on a baseball. For example, a good pitcher can throw the ball with one of several different spins. There is a continuum of possibilities. However, there are only a few discrete options for the quantum spin on a particle – for example, up and down.

When two fusion fuel atoms have the same quantum spin, they are more likely to fuse. “By amplifying the fusion cross section, more power can be produced from the same amount of fuel,” said Parisi. 

While existing spin-polarization methods don’t align every atom, the gains shown in the PPPL model don’t require 100% spin alignment. In fact, the study demonstrates that modest levels of spin polarization can substantially improve the efficiency of the tritium burn, improving overall efficiency and reducing tritium consumption.

Improving efficiency to reduce tritium requirements

With less tritium required, the overall size of the fusion power plant can be reduced, making it easier to license, situate and construct. Collectively, this should lower the operating costs of the fusion system. 

Tritium is also radioactive, and while that radiation is relatively short-lived compared to the spent fuel from nuclear fission reactors, reducing the amount required has safety benefits because it decreases the risk of tritium leakage or contamination.

“The less tritium you have flowing through your system, the less of it will get into the components,” said Parisi. The storage and processing facilities required for the tritium can also be made much smaller and more efficient. This makes things like nuclear licensing easier. “People think that the site boundary size is somewhat proportional to how much tritium you have. So, if you can have a lot less tritium, your plant could be smaller, faster to get approved by regulators and cheaper.”

New avenues to explore

The DOE’s Office of Science has funded separate research about some of the technologies needed to inject the spin-polarized fuel into the fusion vessel. Further work is needed to investigate things needed to implement the proposed system but have yet to be fully explored. “Whether it’s possible to have integrated scenarios that maintain a high-grade fusion plasma with these specific flows of excess fuel and ash from the plasma needs to be determined,” Schwartz said.

Diallo said there are also potential issues related to polarization methods, but these create opportunities. “One challenge would be to demonstrate techniques to produce spin-polarized fuel in large quantities and then store them. There’s a whole new technology area that would open up.”

PPPL is mastering the art of using plasma — the fourth state of matter — to solve some of the world’s toughest science and technology challenges. Nestled on Princeton University’s Forrestal Campus in Plainsboro, New Jersey, our research ignites innovation in a range of applications including fusion energy, nanoscale fabrication, quantum materials and devices, and sustainability science. The University manages the Laboratory for the U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Science, which is the nation’s single largest supporter of basic research in the physical sciences. Feel the heat at https://energy.gov/science and https://www.pppl.gov.  

 

Spanish-language social media increases Latinos’ vulnerability to misinformation



University of California - San Diego




A new study shows that Latinos who rely on Spanish-language social media for news are significantly more likely to believe false political narratives than those who consume English-language content. The research – published in PNAS Nexus and led by political scientists at the University of California San Diego and New York University – highlights growing concerns over misinformation targeting Spanish-speaking communities in the United States.

“Latino voters are heavily courted in U.S. elections, and there has been much speculation on the reasons behind their increase in Republican support in the 2024 Presidential contest. Understanding their news and information sources on social media, especially as it pertains to political misinformation, is an important factor to consider, ” said Marisa Abrajano, the study’s corresponding author and a professor of political science at UC San Diego.  “Our study, which we believe to be the largest of its kind to examine Latinos’ self-reported social media behaviors, finds that Spanish-speaking Latinos who access their news on social media are more vulnerable to political misinformation than those who use English-language social media.”

The research team, convened by NYU’s Center for Social Media and Politics (CSMaP), surveyed more than 1,100 Latino Facebook and Instagram users in the United States. The team offered participants a small monetary incentive to join the study, and included English-dominant, bilingual and Spanish-dominant respondents. The participants were tested on their belief in seven false political narratives, including the claim that Venezuela is intentionally sending criminals to the U.S., the claim that the majority of Planned Parenthood clinics closed after Roe v. Wade was overturned, and the claim that the COVID-19 vaccine makes breast milk dangerous to infants.

The results reveal that Latinos who use Spanish-language social media for their news were between 11 to 20 percentage points more likely to believe in these false stories compared to those who rely on English-language platforms. The relationship persisted even when controlling for factors such as the primary language spoken at home, and the findings remained robust even after testing for acquiescence bias, where respondents might agree with survey statements regardless of their truth.

“While there's been widespread concern about the prevalence of Spanish-language misinformation on social media, our study is the first to empirically demonstrate its impact on political knowledge among Latino communities in the United States,” said Jonathan Nagler, co-author of the paper and co-director of NYU's CSMaP. “We've established a crucial link between the consumption of Spanish-language social media and a less informed electorate. This research fills a critical gap in our understanding of how misinformation affects different linguistic communities and highlights the urgent need for more robust fact-checking and content moderation in Spanish-language social media spaces.”

Additional insights on WhatsApp and YouTube

In a related study forthcoming in the journal Political Research Quarterly, Abrajano, Nagler and colleagues show that Latino online political engagement is very similar to that of non-Hispanic whites across major platforms like Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, and X, formerly Twitter.

WhatsApp, however, stands out as a unique space for Latino users, who engage in political conversations on the platform far more often than non-Hispanic whites. Latinos rely on WhatsApp as a daily source for sharing news, discussing politics, and staying updated, highlighting its importance in Latino political digital life.

This study, based on a survey of 2,326 U.S.-based Latinos and 769 non-Hispanic whites, also used digital trace data – information that reflects real online behaviors, such as which social media accounts people follow or what videos they watch. This data helps researchers understand not just what people self-report about their online behaviors but what they actually do.

Findings from the digital trace data showed that both Latinos and whites frequently turn to YouTube for political news, raising concerns about misinformation given YouTube’s challenges with content moderation.

Spanish-speaking Latinos were also found to engage frequently with Spanish-language political pages from Latin America, creating a unique cross-border information environment.

The combined research findings have serious implications for U.S. democracy, the authors conclude. Their work also highlights the need for additional research efforts on how Latino news consumption helps to explain their political attitudes and beliefs.

The research is part of CSMaP's Bilingual Election Monitor, a project supported by Craig Newmark Philanthropies, the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, and NYU's Office of the Provost and Global Institute for Advanced Study.

In addition to Abrajano and Nagler, co-authors of the PNAS Nexus and PRQ studies are: Marianna Garcia from UC San Diego; Aaron Pope, formerly of CSMaP and now at the University of Copenhagen; Robert Vidigal, formerly of CSMaP and now at Vanderbilt University; and Joshua A. Tucker, co-director of CSMaP.

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Study reveals importance of student-teacher relationships in early childhood education



Researchers explored data from one of the first nationally representative samples in the United States



Society for Research in Child Development




Are student-teacher relationships critical to early childhood education? With roughly 33 million students enrolled in public elementary school education throughout the United States, (National Center for Education Statistics, 2022), there is an acute need to more comprehensively understand the ways in which children’s development can be promoted through student-teacher relationships.  

In a new Child Development study, researchers at The Ohio State University and University of Pennsylvania explored the significance of student-teacher relationships between kindergarten and third grade. Using the Early Childhood Longitudinal Study - Kindergarten Class of 2010-2011, a nationally representative sample of approximately 14,370 children in the United States (51% Male; 51% White; 14% Black; 25% Hispanic; 4% Asian; 6% Other), researchers examined whether student-teacher relationships, as measured by closeness and conflict, matter more in specific grades, last over the early elementary school years, and have accumulating effects over time. The outcomes of these relationships included students’ achievement, absenteeism, executive function, and social behavioral development. Additionally, this study considered whether different groups of students benefit more or less from these relationships. 

To address their study questions, researchers used data from the surveys administered to parents and teachers along with direct assessments of students between kindergarten and third grade. Kindergarten through third grade was focused on because teachers in fourth and fifth grade did not report on their relationships with students. The findings show that the quality of relationships between students and teachers between kindergarten and third grade may have a significant benefit for children’s overall early learning and development. There was also evidence that these relationships matter across the early elementary school years and have cumulative effects over time. All of the children benefited from a close rapport with their teachers and girls tended to fare worse socially than boys when faced with conflict and less closeness in their teacher relationships. 

Findings from the study highlight the importance of student-teacher relationships for children’s development during the early elementary school years and provide valuable information for teachers, school administrators, families and researchers. 

The Society for Research in Child Development (SRCD) had the opportunity to discuss this research with Dr. Arya Ansari, Associate Professor in the College of Education and Human Ecology at The Ohio State University.  

SRCD: What led you to study the quality of student – teacher relationships in early childhood education?  

Dr. Arya Ansari: The topic of student-teacher relationships has received a great deal of attention in developmental and educational research. Despite this attention, there has been no nationally representative investigation into the cumulative, timing-specific, and enduring outcomes of these relationships. Additionally, previous research has often overlooked the patterns that emerge across different grade levels and important outcomes, resulting in a lack of comprehensive insight into the importance of these relationships and how they may vary among different populations. Accordingly, we viewed this study as an important next step toward filling these gaps in knowledge.

SRCD: Could you please expand upon the significance of the Early Childhood Longitudinal Study - Kindergarten Class of 2010-2011? 

Dr. Arya Ansari: The Early Childhood Longitudinal Study - Kindergarten Class of 2010-2011 (ECLS-K) is one of the few longitudinal and nationally representative samples of children in the United States, providing much needed insight into the home and school experiences of young children between kindergarten and fifth grade. The ECLS-K is a critical resource for understanding the role of student-teacher relationships in the early learning and development of young children. By providing regular information on children’s relationships and outcomes, the ECLS-K can be used to pinpoint effective points of intervention that can enhance relationships among students and teachers.

SRCD: How can these findings be useful for teachers, school administrators, families and researchers?

Dr. Arya Ansari: The results of this study have several potential implications for teachers, administrators, families, and researchers. For teachers, our findings underscore the importance of developing strong connections with students across the early elementary school years. By recognizing the importance of a close and conflict free relationship, teachers can better support student success. For administrators, our findings highlight the importance of supporting teachers so that they have the time and space to cultivate stronger relationships with students. For families, our findings highlight the importance of collaborating with teachers to better support their children. Finally, for researchers, our findings provide a basis for continued exploration into the different aspects of relationships that shape student learning, and how these relationships may vary across populations and contexts.

SRCD: Were you surprised by any of the findings? 

Dr. Arya Ansari: The most surprising finding is the consistency with which student-teacher relationships mattered for a broad range of outcomes across different student populations, both in the short- and long-term. We were also surprised that relationships formed as early as kindergarten matter for development not only in that year, but through the end of third grade. Moreover, these early connections significantly influence not only academic achievement, but also social and emotional development and executive functioning skills, which are critical for educational success.

SRCD: How can teachers strengthen their relationships with young children, particularly young girls who rely on this close relationship to help develop socially?

Dr. Arya Ansari: Teachers can strengthen their relationships with young children, and in particular young girls, in several ways. Teachers should try to create an environment of open communication and actively listen to their students. Additionally, showing empathy and understanding by validating emotions, encouraging collaboration, and personalizing interactions based on individual student interests can help build stronger connections. At the same time, however, it is important that we provide teachers with the support needed to allow them to develop these stronger and more individualized relationships. 

SRCD: What’s next in this field of research? 

Dr. Arya Ansari: We need more information on what contributes to closer and less conflictual relationships between students and teachers and how that drives student achievement and social-emotional development. Identifying these factors is critical so we can develop more targeted interventions and strategies that address the unique needs of different student groups. 

Summarized from an article in Child Development, “The Cumulative, Timing-Specific, and Enduring Associations Between Student—Teacher Relationships and Early Elementary Outcomes” by Ansari, A., Buckley, M.N., (The Ohio State University) and Woods, S.C., Gottfried, M. (University of Pennsylvania). Copyright 2024 The Society for Research in Child Development. All rights reserved. 

 SOCIAL ORIGINS OF MENTAL HEALTH

Do area-wide social and environmental factors affect individuals’ risk of cognitive impairment?



Wiley




Research published in the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society has identified several community-level factors that may increase people’s risk of experiencing cognitive impairment.

In the study of 2,830 dementia-free US individuals aged 65+ years, 23.2% of participants were categorized as having mild cognitive impairment. People who lived in areas with higher neighborhood disadvantage, higher air pollution, higher homicide rate, and less greenspace had elevated odds of having mild cognitive impairment. Completing schooling in a Southern US state was also associated with a greater likelihood of mild cognitive impairment. After adjusting for age, race, sex, and education level, the link between mild cognitive impairment and higher neighborhood disadvantage remained statistically significant.

“As clinicians and researchers, we routinely consider older adults’ individual risk factors for cognitive impairment, but we also need to consider the influence of the social and environmental factors where they live and work.  If planners and policymakers want to reduce disease burden in our communities, they too need to take into account the social determinants of health,” said corresponding author Mary Ganguli, MD, MPH, of the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine.

URL upon publication: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/jgs.19251

 

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About the Journal
Journal of the American Geriatrics Society is the go-to journal for clinical aging research. We provide a diverse, interprofessional community of healthcare professionals with the latest insights on geriatrics education, clinical practice, and public policy — all supporting the high-quality, person-centered care essential to our well-being as we age.

About Wiley     
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