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Featured researches published by K. M. Krol.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Genetic variation in CD38 and breastfeeding experience interact to impact infants’ attention to social eye cues

K. M. Krol; Mikhail Monakhov; Poh San Lai; Richard P. Ebstein; Tobias Grossmann

Significance Maternal care plays an important role in the development of the offspring’s social behaviors through the programming of relevant neural and hormonal systems. However, it is unclear how specific maternal behaviors, such as breastfeeding and genetic variation related to the oxytocin system, contribute to emerging social behaviors in human infants. We therefore examined infants’ attention to emotional eyes. Our results revealed that infants with the genotype previously associated with decreased availability of oxytocin and an increased rate of autism were most affected by extended durations of exclusive breastfeeding. Namely, these infants showed increased attention to happy eyes and decreased attention to angry eyes. This finding suggests that breastfeeding experience enhances prosocial tendencies in infants that are genetically at risk for autism. Attending to emotional information conveyed by the eyes is an important social skill in humans. The current study examined this skill in early development by measuring attention to eyes while viewing emotional faces in 7-mo-old infants. In particular, we investigated individual differences in infant attention to eyes in the context of genetic variation (CD38 rs3796863 polymorphism) and experiential variation (exclusive breastfeeding duration) related to the oxytocin system. Our results revealed that, whereas infants at this age show a robust fear bias (increased attention to fearful eyes), their attention to angry and happy eyes varies as a function of exclusive breastfeeding experience and genetic variation in CD38. Specifically, extended exclusive breastfeeding duration selectively enhanced looking preference to happy eyes and decreased looking to angry eyes. Importantly, however, this interaction was impacted by CD38 variation, such that only the looking preferences of infants homozygous for the C allele of rs3796863 were affected by breastfeeding experience. This genotype has been associated with reduced release of oxytocin and higher rates of autism. In contrast, infants with the CA/AA genotype showed similar looking preferences regardless of breastfeeding exposure. Thus, differences in the sensitivity to emotional eyes may be linked to an interaction between the endogenous (CD38) and exogenous (breastfeeding) availability of oxytocin. These findings underline the importance of maternal care and the oxytocin system in contributing to the early development of responding to social eye cues.


Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience | 2015

Duration of exclusive breastfeeding is associated with differences in infants' brain responses to emotional body expressions

K. M. Krol; Purva Rajhans; Manuela Missana; Tobias Grossmann

Much research has recognized the general importance of maternal behavior in the early development and programing of the mammalian offspring’s brain. Exclusive breastfeeding (EBF) duration, the amount of time in which breastfed meals are the only source of sustenance, plays a prominent role in promoting healthy brain and cognitive development in human children. However, surprisingly little is known about the influence of breastfeeding on social and emotional development in infancy. In the current study, we examined whether and how the duration of EBF impacts the neural processing of emotional signals by measuring electro-cortical responses to body expressions in 8-month-old infants. Our analyses revealed that infants with high EBF experience show a significantly greater neural sensitivity to happy body expressions than those with low EBF experience. Moreover, regression analyses revealed that the neural bias toward happiness or fearfulness differs as a function of the duration of EBF. Specifically, longer breastfeeding duration is associated with a happy bias, whereas shorter breastfeeding duration is associated with a fear bias. These findings suggest that breastfeeding experience can shape the way in which infants respond to emotional signals.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Breastfeeding experience differentially impacts recognition of happiness and anger in mothers

K. M. Krol; Sunjeev K. Kamboj; H. Valerie Curran; Tobias Grossmann

Breastfeeding is a dynamic biological and social process based on hormonal regulation involving oxytocin. While there is much work on the role of breastfeeding in infant development and on the role of oxytocin in socio-emotional functioning in adults, little is known about how breastfeeding impacts emotion perception during motherhood. We therefore examined whether breastfeeding influences emotion recognition in mothers. Using a dynamic emotion recognition task, we found that longer durations of exclusive breastfeeding were associated with faster recognition of happiness, providing evidence for a facilitation of processing positive facial expressions. In addition, we found that greater amounts of breastfed meals per day were associated with slower recognition of anger. Our findings are in line with current views of oxytocin function and support accounts that view maternal behaviour as tuned to prosocial responsiveness, by showing that vital elements of maternal care can facilitate the rapid responding to affiliative stimuli by reducing importance of threatening stimuli.


PLOS ONE | 2015

A Specific Association between Facial Disgust Recognition and Estradiol Levels in Naturally Cycling Women.

Sunjeev K. Kamboj; K. M. Krol; H. Valerie Curran

Subtle changes in social cognition are associated with naturalistic fluctuations in estrogens and progesterone over the course of the menstrual cycle. Using a dynamic emotion recognition task we aimed to provide a comprehensive description of the association between ovarian hormone levels and emotion recognition performance using a variety of performance metrics. Naturally cycling, psychiatrically healthy women attended a single experimental session during a follicular (days 7–13; n = 16), early luteal (days 15–19; n = 14) or late luteal phase (days 22–27; n = 14) of their menstrual cycle. Correct responses and reaction times to dynamic facial expressions were recorded and a two-high threshold analysis was used to assess discrimination and response bias. Salivary progesterone and estradiol were assayed and subjective measures of premenstrual symptoms, anxiety and positive and negative affect assessed. There was no interaction between cycle phase (follicular, early luteal, late luteal) and facial expression (sad, happy, fearful, angry, neutral and disgusted) on any of the recognition performance metrics. However, across the sample as a whole, progesterone levels were positively correlated with reaction times to a variety of facial expressions (anger, happiness, sadness and neutral expressions). In contrast, estradiol levels were specifically correlated with disgust processing on three performance indices (correct responses, response bias and discrimination). Premenstrual symptoms, anxiety and positive and negative affect were not associated with emotion recognition indices or hormone levels. The study highlights the role of naturalistic variations in ovarian hormone levels in modulating emotion recognition. In particular, progesterone seems to have a general slowing effect on facial expression processing. Our findings also provide the first behavioural evidence of a specific role for estrogens in the processing of disgust in humans.


Development and Psychopathology | 2015

The association of temperament and maternal empathy with individual differences in infants' neural responses to emotional body expressions.

Purva Rajhans; Manuela Missana; K. M. Krol; Tobias Grossmann


Bundesgesundheitsblatt-gesundheitsforschung-gesundheitsschutz | 2018

Psychological effects of breastfeeding on children and mothers

K. M. Krol; Tobias Grossmann


3rd IMPRS NeuroCom Summer School | 2013

Duration of exclusive breastfeeding impacts infant brain responses to emotional body expressions

K. M. Krol; Purva Rajhans; Manuela Missana; Tobias Grossmann


Biological Psychiatry | 2018

S38. Epigenetic Modification of the Oxytocin Receptor Gene Impacts Infant Neural Response to Emotional Faces

K. M. Krol; Meghan H. Puglia; James P. Morris; Jessica J. Connelly; Tobias Grossmann


70th Annual Meeting of the Society of Biological Psychiatry | 2015

Genetic variation in the oxytocin system is linked to infant brain responses to fearful faces

K. M. Krol; Mikhail Monakhov; Richard P. Ebstein; Tobias Grossmann


70th Annual Meeting of the Society of Biological Psychiatry | 2015

Genetic variation in the maternal oxytocin system is associated with infants' cortisol response to breastfeeding

K. M. Krol; Mikhail Monakhov; Richard P. Ebstein; Tobias Grossmann

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Mikhail Monakhov

National University of Singapore

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Richard P. Ebstein

National University of Singapore

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