» Articles » PMID: 39012794

How Adverse Childhood Experiences Get Under the Skin: A Systematic Review, Integration and Methodological Discussion on Threat and Reward Learning Mechanisms

Overview
Journal Elife
Specialty Biology
Date 2024 Jul 16
PMID 39012794
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) are a major risk factor for the development of multiple psychopathological conditions, but the mechanisms underlying this link are poorly understood. Associative learning encompasses key mechanisms through which individuals learn to link important environmental inputs to emotional and behavioral responses. ACEs may impact the normative maturation of associative learning processes, resulting in their enduring maladaptive expression manifesting in psychopathology. In this review, we lay out a systematic and methodological overview and integration of the available evidence of the proposed association between ACEs and threat and reward learning processes. We summarize results from a systematic literature search (following PRISMA guidelines) which yielded a total of 81 articles (threat: n=38, reward: n=43). Across the threat and reward learning fields, behaviorally, we observed a converging pattern of aberrant learning in individuals with a history of ACEs, independent of other sample characteristics, specific ACE types, and outcome measures. Specifically, blunted threat learning was reflected in reduced discrimination between threat and safety cues, primarily driven by diminished responding to conditioned threat cues. Furthermore, attenuated reward learning manifested in reduced accuracy and learning rate in tasks involving acquisition of reward contingencies. Importantly, this pattern emerged despite substantial heterogeneity in ACE assessment and operationalization across both fields. We conclude that blunted threat and reward learning may represent a mechanistic route by which ACEs may become physiologically and neurobiologically embedded and ultimately confer greater risk for psychopathology. In closing, we discuss potentially fruitful future directions for the research field, including methodological and ACE assessment considerations.

Citing Articles

Person-centered analyses reveal that developmental adversity at moderate levels and neural threat/safety discrimination are associated with lower anxiety in early adulthood.

Sisk L, Keding T, Ruiz S, Odriozola P, Kribakaran S, Cohodes E Commun Psychol. 2025; 3(1):31.

PMID: 40044923 PMC: 11882445. DOI: 10.1038/s44271-025-00193-x.


Reduced discrimination between signals of danger and safety but not overgeneralization is linked to exposure to childhood adversity in healthy adults.

Klingelhofer-Jens M, Hutterer K, Schiele M, Leehr E, Schumann D, Rosenkranz K Elife. 2025; 12.

PMID: 39976327 PMC: 11841987. DOI: 10.7554/eLife.91425.


Between faces: childhood adversity is associated with reduced threat-safety discrimination during facial expression processing in adolescence.

Samaey C, Van der Donck S, Lecei A, Vettori S, Qiao Z, van Winkel R BMC Med. 2024; 22(1):382.

PMID: 39256825 PMC: 11389258. DOI: 10.1186/s12916-024-03610-w.


How adverse childhood experiences get under the skin: A systematic review, integration and methodological discussion on threat and reward learning mechanisms.

Ruge J, Ehlers M, Kastrinogiannis A, Klingelhofer-Jens M, Koppold A, Abend R Elife. 2024; 13.

PMID: 39012794 PMC: 11251725. DOI: 10.7554/eLife.92700.

References
1.
Pollak S, Cicchetti D, Hornung K, Reed A . Recognizing emotion in faces: developmental effects of child abuse and neglect. Dev Psychol. 2000; 36(5):679-688. DOI: 10.1037/0012-1649.36.5.679. View

2.
Gehred M, Knodt A, Ambler A, Bourassa K, Danese A, Elliott M . Long-term Neural Embedding of Childhood Adversity in a Population-Representative Birth Cohort Followed for 5 Decades. Biol Psychiatry. 2021; 90(3):182-193. PMC: 8274314. DOI: 10.1016/j.biopsych.2021.02.971. View

3.
Jenness J, Miller A, Rosen M, McLaughlin K . Extinction Learning as a Potential Mechanism Linking High Vagal Tone with Lower PTSD Symptoms among Abused Youth. J Abnorm Child Psychol. 2018; 47(4):659-670. PMC: 6377350. DOI: 10.1007/s10802-018-0464-0. View

4.
Scharfenort R, Menz M, Lonsdorf T . Adversity-induced relapse of fear: neural mechanisms and implications for relapse prevention from a study on experimentally induced return-of-fear following fear conditioning and extinction. Transl Psychiatry. 2016; 6:e858. PMC: 5545712. DOI: 10.1038/tp.2016.126. View

5.
Hosseini-Kamkar N, Varvani Farahani M, Nikolic M, Stewart K, Goldsmith S, Soltaninejad M . Adverse Life Experiences and Brain Function: A Meta-Analysis of Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Findings. JAMA Netw Open. 2023; 6(11):e2340018. PMC: 10620621. DOI: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.40018. View