Lc. Mayes et al., IMPAIRED REGULATION OF AROUSAL IN 3-MONTH-OLD INFANTS EXPOSED PRENATALLY TO COCAINE AND OTHER DRUGS, Development and psychopathology, 8(1), 1996, pp. 29-42
This study investigated relations between drug exposure, particularly
cocaine, and infants' regulation of arousal in response to novelty. Si
xty-three infants-36 cocaine exposed and 27 non-cocaine exposed-partic
ipated at 3 months of age in a novel-repeat stimulus presentation proc
edure. Arousal was operationalized in terms of infant behavioral state
, affective expressiveness, and attention to the stimulus. Infants wer
e tested and infant behaviors were scored by experimenters blind to th
e drug exposure status of the infant. There were no differences betwee
n the two groups in baseline behavioral state or affective expression
before the presentation of novel stimuli. Compared to the non-cocaine-
exposed group, infants exposed prenatally to cocaine and other drugs w
ere more likely to exhibit a crying state and to display negative affe
ct on novel stimulus presentations. There were no group differences in
the amount of looking toward the stimulus. Both groups showed less cr
ying and negative affect when stimuli were presented a second time, bu
t decrements were consistently greater for the cocaine-exposed group.
These results obtained when group differences were controlled for soci
odemographic and perinatal variables. Sources of differences in the re
gulation of arousal in cocaine-exposed and non-cocaine-exposed infants
are discussed, and impairments in the regulation of arousal in cocain
e-exposed infants are considered in a framework of predictive implicat
ions for children's social and cognitive development.