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  • Upstate KIDS

    Alternate Title(s)
    Upstate New York Infant Development Screening, Upstate KIDS Follow-Up Study
    Authors
    Edwina Yeung
    Description

    The Upstate New York Infant Development Screening (Upstate KIDS) Study is a collaboration between the New York State Department of Health, University at Albany, and the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD). The study includes information from over 5,034 mothers and their 6,171 children in New York State, excluding New York City, who were recruited...

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    Akhgar Ghassabian
  • NYU Dataset

    Maternal Behavior in Mice Results From Intrinsic Mechanisms and Experience-Dependent Plasticity in Auditory Cortex

    Authors
    Jennifer K. Schiavo
    Silvana Valtcheva
    Chloe J. Bair-Marshall
    Soomin C. Song
    2 more author(s)...
    Description

    This study examined to what extent parental animals are intrinsically sensitive to neonatal vocalizations, or instead learn about vocal cues for parenting responses. In mice, naive virgins do not recognize the meaning of pup distress calls, but retrieve isolated pups to the nest following cohousing with a mother and litter. For this study, C57BL/6J virgin females were used in all experiments. The dataset...

    Subject
    Neuroscience
    Access Rights
    Free to All
  • NYU Dataset

    Baby's First Years, New York City, New Orleans, Omaha, and Twin Cities, 2018-2022

    Alternate Title(s)
    Household Income and Child Development in the First Years of Life, BFY
    Authors
    Katherine A. Magnuson
    Kimberly Noble
    Greg J. Duncan
    Nathan A. Fox
    3 more author(s)...
    Description

    Baby's First Years is the first randomized controlled trial in the United States to examine the causal impact of unconditional cash payments on children's early cognitive, socio-emotional, and brain development over 52 months. Researchers recruited 1,000 mothers with infants and incomes below the federal poverty line residing near study sites in New Orleans, LA, the Twin Cities (Minneapolis, MN and...

    Subject
    Mental Health
    Risk Factors
    Access Rights
    Free to All
  • NYU Dataset

    In Utero Assessment of the Human Neural Connectome and Later Child Behavior

    Authors
    Moriah E. Thomason
    Description

    To examine the association between fetal behavior and brain development through childhood, investigators conducted a longitudinal study with 120 normal fetuses in utero through 36 months of age recruited between 2011 and 2018 from Hutzel Women’s Hospital in Detroit, Michigan using continuous four‐dimensional functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Twelve‐minute fMRI scans were conducted in 120...

    Subject
    Mental Health
    Neuroscience
    Pregnancy
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    Free to All
    Application Required
  • NYU Dataset

    Infant pain vs. pain with parental suppression: Immediate and enduring impact on brain, pain and affect

    Authors
    Gordon A. Barr
    Maya Opendak
    Rosemarie E. Perry
    Emma Sarro
    1 more author(s)...
    Description

    To investigate the impact of social buffering on pain, the study team administered mild tail shocks to infant rat pups at postnatal day (PN) 8 or 12, with or without their mothers. They hypothesized that repeated exposure to shock would alter their inflammatory pain responses as adults when experienced between PN5 and 9 (pain sensitive period prior to functional maturation of the amygdala), whereas...

    Subject
    Mental Health
    Neuroscience
    Access Rights
    Free to All
  • NYU Dataset

    COVID-19 and Infant Gut Microbiome

    Authors
    Francesca R. Querdasi
    Sarah C. Vogel
    Moriah E. Thomason
    Bridget L. Callaghan
    1 more author(s)...
    Description

    This dataset was collected for a study which examined differences in the gut microbiome within a cohort of 12-month old infants who provided samples either before the start of the COVID-19 pandemic or during the first 9 months of the pandemic. The study also assessed the demographics and health of the infants' primary caregivers, including factors such as race, ethnicity, socioeconomic status, mental...

    Subject
    COVID-19
    Mental Health
    Risk Factors
    Access Rights
    Free to All