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Micheal Meaney

Micheal MeanyMicheal Meaney specializes in early childhood development. He was one of the first researchers to point out that adversity in early life might alter neural development rendering certain individuals at risk for pathology later on. Early life events play an important role in determining vulnerability or resistance to chronic illness, such as depression, anxiety disorders, schizophrenia and drug abuse.

It is his opinion that a mother's touch may not only be a comforting and pleasant experience for her child, but may also be a trigger by which genes involved in shaping our response to stress get turned on or off. Individual differences in maternal care can modify an offspring's cognitive development, as well as its ability to cope with stress later in life.

Michael Meaney was one of the first researchers to identify the importance of maternal care in modifying the expression of genes that regulate behavioral and neuro-endocrine responses to stress, as well as hippocampal synaptic development.

Michael Meaney is currently a James McGill professor of Medicine and full professor in the Departments of Psychiatry and Neurology and Neurosurgery. He is also the Director of the Program for the study of Behavior, Genes and Environment at McGill University.

 
 

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