
How young children manage stress
Looking for links between temperament and
experience
Stress—the emotional and physical impact our bodies experience as
we adjust to challenge—is a normal part of life. Whether caused by
daily demands or a physical threat, stress triggers a primal
physical response, releasing hormones that ready the body to react,
then return to normal. Yet today many people suffer from chronic
stress, which is linked to heart disease, depression, diabetes, and
countless other health problems leading to early death.
Scientists believe our ability to manage stress as adults is
formed in childhood through a combination of genes and experiences.
For two decades, Megan Gunnar, child development professor and
director of the Human Developmental Psychobiology Lab, has pioneered
the field of measuring stress in young children as a way to unravel
the mysteries of healthy development.
“Some individuals experience stress from minor problems, while
others let everything roll off their backs,” says Gunnar. “Our
research seeks to understand how this range of differences develops
and impacts our mental and physical health.”
How the research is conducted
Gunnar’s lab assesses children’s stress levels by measuring
cortisol, a blood-borne hormone that increases under stress. This
hormone leaks into and can be measured in saliva. To make saliva
collection enjoyable, Gunnar and her students have developed a
playful testing method called the “Tasting Game,” where children
suck on test strips they first get to dip in a sweet substance that
increases saliva flow.
What the research shows
Gunnar’s research finds that social relationships control
cortisol levels in infants and young children. Children with secure
attachments to their caregivers—even when emotionally upset—show
stable cortisol levels, while even minor challenges raised cortisol
levels among those in insecure relationships. She has shown the key
ingredient to buffering stress is sensitive, responsive,
individualized care, the type of care that leads to secure
attachment relationships.
Stress in day care and preschool settings

Since the mid-1990s, Gunnar has studied cortisol levels when
young children are in group care—day care and preschool. The most
profound discovery was that 70–80 percent of children in
center-based care show ever-increasing levels of cortisol across the
day, with the biggest increases occurring in toddlers. By first
grade, children don’t show these stress reactions to being with
other children all day.
Gunnar has evidence that it is not separation from parents, but
the experiences young children have in child care that produce these
stress responses. “There is something about managing a complex peer
setting for an extended time that triggers stress in young
children,” says Gunnar.
In a study of family-based child care, Gunnar finds that
children’s stress levels do not rise in settings where they receive
a lot of attention, support, and guidance from the care provider,
but do rise when they don’t. This is especially true of children
with negative emotional temperaments. Gunnar is studying whether
frequent increases in stress hormones at child care affect
children’s emotional and cognitive development.
When Gunnar’s son entered preschool, she began to notice how much
preschoolers care about fitting in and making friends. Her studies
of preschoolers have shown that stress levels seem to be directly
related to relationships with peers, and decrease as kids gain
social competence.
“Negotiating friendships is very complicated,” says Gunnar. “It
doesn’t appear that the child needs to be popular to maintain low
stress, but it seems very important that they not be socially
rejected.” Gunnar is conducting ongoing preschool studies that focus
on understanding how a child’s temperament, relationships, and
social skills impact their stress level.
Brain development among children adopted from
orphanages and foster care
A major question is whether early neglect has long-term effects
on children’s stress, emotion, and cognitive functioning. Through
grants from the National Institutes of Mental Health, Gunnar has
been studying children adopted internationally from foster and
orphanage care. Using a registry of over 3,000 Minnesotan
internationally-adopted children, she and her colleagues are
studying whether early deprivation has long-term effects on specific
brain regions involved in emotion and behavior regulation.
She hopes the project will discover information that could lead
to interventions to help these children reach their full emotional
and intellectual potential.
What others say about this research
W. Thomas Boyce, professor of epidemiology and child development,
University of California-Berkeley, says, “Her research has been
fundamental to an emerging vision of biology-environment interplay
in disorders of early development and behavior, and has deepened
early childhood educators’ understanding of and responses to the
differences between young children.”
“Megan has taught the fields of developmental neuroscience,
psychology, and psychopathology the importance of examining
neurobiological stress systems in their research,” says Dante
Cicchetti, psychology professor at the University of Rochester and
director of the Mt. Hope Family Center, Rochester, NY, who studied
stress in maltreated children with Gunnar. “Her research has shown
that differential experiences can exert varied effects on brain
development and child adaptation.”
Why this research matters
With nearly 60 percent of American women working outside the
home, most young children spend much of their day in child care,
where many first learn to interact with peers, establish
relationships with adults other than their parents, and learn social
skills like sharing, waiting, and cooperating.
“In the United States, there is no standardized system for
maintaining high quality child care settings,” says Gunnar. “My
research shows on a physical level—as others have shown on a
behavioral level—that children who experience poor-quality care in
their early life are at risk for poor developmental outcomes.”
Gunnar’s ongoing research can provide families and policymakers
information vital to making the best care decisions for children,
such as standards for low-stress day care settings, and guidelines
to help parents select the best type of care for their child’s
temperament. This research continues to shed light on how quality
child care directly influences brain development among children.
January 2005
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