Affiliation:
1. Department of Psychology, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois, USA;
2. Departments of Psychiatry and Medical Social Sciences, Institute for Innovations in Developmental Sciences, and Institute for Policy Research, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois, USA
Abstract
Psychotic disorders are highly debilitating with poor prognoses and courses of chronic illness. In recent decades, conceptual models have shaped understanding, informed treatment, and guided research questions. However, these models have classically focused on the adolescent and early adulthood stages immediately preceding onset while conceptualizing early infancy through all of childhood as a unitary premorbid period. In addition, models have paid limited attention to differential effects of types of stress; contextual factors such as local, regional, and country-level characteristics or sociocultural contexts; and the timing of the stressor or environmental risk. This review discusses emerging research suggesting that ( a) considering effects specific to neurodevelopmental stages prior to adolescence is highly informative, ( b) understanding specific stressors and levels of environmental exposures (i.e., systemic or contextual features) is necessary, and ( c) exploring the dynamic interplay between development, levels and types of stressors, and environments can shed new light, informing a specified neurodevelopmental and multifaceted diathesis-stress model.
Subject
Insect Science,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
7 articles.
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