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Researchers Search Results
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| Name: |
Boyce, W. Thomas |
| Titles: |
Scientist Level 3, CFRI Professor, Interdisciplinary Studies and Pediatrics, University of British Columbia Sunny Hill Health Centre-BC Leadership Chair in Child Development |
| Degrees / Designations: |
MD |
| Primary Area of Research: |
Developmental Neurosciences & Child Health |
| Secondary Area(s) of Research: |
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| Email: |
tom.boyce@ubc.ca |
| Phone: |
604-827-4465 |
| Fax: |
604-822-0640 |
| Mailing Address: |
Human Early Learning Partnership University of British Columbia Room 440, 2206 East Mall Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z3 |
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| Research Areas |
- Developmental psychobiology/neurogenomics
- Social epidemiology
- Neuroscience of stress and adversity
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| Summary |
| My research addresses the interplay among neurobiological and psychosocial processes that leads to socially partitioned differences in child health and development. Studying the interactive influences of socioeconomic adversities and neurobiological responses, this work has demonstrated how psychological stress and neurobiological reactivity to aversive social contexts operate conjointly to produce disorders of both physical and mental health in childhood populations. |
| Current Projects |
Current research projects include:
- A pilot study of deficits in prefrontal cortex development among children from disadvantaged socioeconomic backgrounds.
- A longitudinal study of how social subordination and marginality in early school settings affects mental and physical health in middle childhood and adolescence.
- A cross-sectional study of maternal caretaking behavior as a determinant of methylation profiles among stress-responsive genes in human infants.
- A large study of how socioeconomic status in middle childhood affects epigenetic markings among the stress-responsive genes.
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| Selected Publications |
Kim YS, Leventhal BL, Koh Y-J & Boyce WT.: Bullying increased suicide risk: Prospective study of Korean adolescents. Archives of Suicide Research. 2009 Spring;13(1), 15-30.
Ellis BJ, Boyce WT.: Biological sensitivity to context. Current Directions in Psychological Science. 2008 Jun;17(3):183-187.
Boyce WT, Essex MJ, Alkon A, Goldsmith HH, Kraemer HC, Kupfer DJ: Early father involvement moderates biobehavioral susceptibility to mental health problems in middle childhood. Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry 45(12):1510-20, 2006.
Boyce WT: Social stratification, health and violence in the very young. Ann NY Acad Sci 1036: 47-68, 2005.
Ellis BJ, Essex MJ, Boyce WT: Biological sensitivity to context: II. Tests of an evolutionary-developmental hypothesis. Development and Psychopathology 17 (2): 303-328, 2005.
Boyce WT, Ellis BJ: Biological sensitivity to context: I. An evolutionary-developmental theory of the origins and functions of stress reactivity. Development and Psychopathology. 17 (2): 271-301, 2005. |
| Honours & Awards |
Academy of Behavioral Medicine Research
American Pediatric Society
Alfred Childs Distinguished Service Award, School of Public Health, University of California, Berkeley
National Scientific Council on the Developing Child
Board of Scientific Advisors, National Institute of Child Health and Human Development
Co-Director, Experience-Based Brain and Biological Development Research Network, Canadian Institute for Advanced Research |
| Research Group Members |
Jelena Obradović, PhD, Killam Post-Doctoral Fellow, UBC Nicki Bush, PhD, Post-Doctoral Fellow, University of California, Berkeley Nicole Catherine, Project Coordinator, Doctoral student in Educational Psychology, UBC Jane Ng, MD, Pediatric resident, BC Children’s Hospital |
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