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This is Scientific American 60-Second Mind, I'm Christie Nicholson. Got a minute?

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Children who experience neglect, abuse and poverty have a tougher time as adults than do well-cared-for kids.

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Now there's evidence that such stress can actually change the size of brain structures responsible for learning, memory and processing emotion.

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The finding is in the journal Biological Psychiatry.

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Researchers took images of the brains of 12-year-olds who had suffered either physical abuse or neglect or had grown up poor.

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From the images the scientists were able to measure the size of the amygdala and hippocampus, two structures involved in emotional processing and memory.

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And they compared the sizes of these structures with those of 12-year-old children who were raised in middle-class families and had not been abused.

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And they found that the stressed children had significantly smaller amygdalas and hippocampuses than did the kids from the more nurturing environments.

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Early life stress has been associated with depression, anxiety, cancer and lack of career success later on in adulthood.

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This study on the sizes of brain regions may offer physiological clues to why what happens to toddlers can have such a profound impact decades later.

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Thanks for the minute, for Scientific American 60-Second Mind. I'm Christie Nicholson.

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