Abstract
Social buffering - the attenuation of stress by maternal safety signals - is a core mammalian-general stress management mechanism implicating two ancient systems: the oxytocinergic and HPA systems. Yet, because human attachments are representation-based, understanding social buffering mechanisms in humans requires the assessment of relationship history and consideration of early life stress (ELS), which alters stress responsivity. We followed a unique trauma-exposed cohort across childhood, versus a low-stress control group, and repeatedly observed maternal sensitive, safety-promoting style. In adolescence, we used an attachment induction paradigm that exposed children to both live and reminders of attachment safety signals and measured oxytocin and cortisol baseline and response, to test how maternal safety signals impact hormonal reactivity in children reared under high- versus low-stress conditions. Only safety-promoting mothers exhibited a stress-buffering function, but their effect was system-specific and depended on the rearing context. For oxytocin, safety-promoting mothers normalized the deficient baseline oxytocin levels observed in ELS youth by implicating a plasticity-by-affiliation mechanism. For cortisol, safety-promoting mothering reduced the initial stress response only among youth reared in low-stress contexts via the typical buffering-by-safety mechanism. Results suggest that human attachments require internalized security evolving over time to trigger a stress buffering function. Under conditions of chronic early stress, the stressful rearing context overrides the maternal safety signals, normative stress buffering mechanisms fail, and safety-promoting mothers switch to an immature, affiliation-based mechanism that relies on maternal presence.
Original language | English |
---|---|
Pages (from-to) | 72-80 |
Number of pages | 9 |
Journal | International Journal of Psychophysiology |
Volume | 152 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Jun 2020 |
Bibliographical note
Publisher Copyright:© 2020 Elsevier B.V.
Funding
Supported by the NARSAD foundation and the Simms/Mann Foundation Chair to Ruth Feldman. Karen Yirmiya is grateful to the Azrieli Foundation for the award of an Azrieli Fellowship.
Funders | Funder number |
---|---|
NARSAD Foundation | |
Simms/Mann Foundation | |
Azrieli Foundation |
Keywords
- Cortisol
- Early life stress
- Longitudinal studies
- Mother-child relations
- Oxytocin
- Social buffering