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As climate disasters grow, early skills may help children’s brains before they are born, study finds

News RoomBy News RoomApril 27, 2026
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The Power of Early Skills: How Childhood Independence Can Offset Prenatal Stress

A groundbreaking study offers new hope for children who experience stress before birth, suggesting that the key to resilience may lie in the simple, everyday skills they learn in early childhood. Published in Developmental Neuroscience, the research indicates that teaching children to be independent and interact confidently with their world can help soften or even reduce the negative neurological effects of significant prenatal stress. This discovery shifts the focus from inevitable adversity to actionable intervention, highlighting that while the origins of stress may be beyond a child’s control, the path to resilience can be actively nurtured through developmental support.

The research, conducted by a team from the City University of New York (CUNY) Graduate Center and Queens College, used a poignant real-world model: children who were in the womb during Superstorm Sandy in 2012. This historic natural disaster provided a clear case study of acute prenatal stress. The pilot study included a modest sample of 11 children with this prenatal exposure and 23 without. Between ages 2 and 6, researchers carefully observed and measured these children’s “adaptive behaviors”—the foundational everyday skills encompassing communication, self-care, and social interaction. Later, at age 8, the children underwent brain scans while performing tasks like recognizing emotional facial expressions, which activate brain regions critical for processing feelings.

The results revealed a compelling and hopeful pattern. As expected, children exposed to prenatal stress showed a slight tendency toward lower adaptive behavior scores and reduced activity in key emotion-processing areas of the brain. However, the story didn’t end there. The critical finding was that these brain differences were closely tied to the adaptive skills the children had developed. Those exposed to stress who had built stronger everyday skills showed brain activity that was remarkably similar to their non-exposed peers. In essence, robust early-life skills appeared to act as a buffer, helping the brain overcome the initial vulnerability created by prenatal stress.

From a neurological perspective, these findings underscore what researchers call “the brain’s remarkable capacity for resilience,” as noted by Duke Shereen, PhD, director of the Neuroimaging Core at CUNY. The brain scans specifically highlighted the limbic system—a complex set of structures vital for regulating emotions, processing sensory information, and forming memories. In children with weaker adaptive skills, this system showed reduced activity. This direct link between observable childhood competence and underlying brain function powerfully demonstrates that development is not a one-way street. The brain remains moldable, and positive experiences in early childhood can actively sculpt and support healthier neural pathways.

This leads to a profound, practical implication: actively fostering independence and adaptive skills is not just about improving behavior; it is a potential form of brain health intervention. As explained by doctoral student Donato DeIngeniis, “what happens in those early developmental years really matters for how the brain responds later.” Teaching a child to communicate needs, manage simple self-care tasks, and navigate social interactions does more than smooth daily routines. It may actively train and strengthen the brain circuits involved in emotional regulation and resilience, building a neurological shield against earlier adversity.

While the study’s authors, including lead researcher Yoko Nomura, emphasize that this is preliminary evidence from a small sample and requires larger-scale confirmation, its relevance is immense. In an era where climate change is increasing the frequency of natural disasters, more pregnant women are likely to experience severe stress. This research points toward a proactive, empowering strategy. By prioritizing early interventions that build adaptive life skills, society can support children not only in their behavioral development but also in fortifying their very brain architecture, turning the tide on prenatal stress and fostering a foundation of lifelong resilience.

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