# Pivotal Transitions in Early Infancy that Shape Network Development of the Social Brain

> **NIH NIH P50** · EMORY UNIVERSITY · 2021 · $155,814

## Abstract

PROJECT SUMMARY 
 The goal of this project is to map transitions in brain and behavior over the first 6 months of life in infants at 
high- and low-risk for Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD). This study builds on results demonstrating that a basic 
mechanism of social adaptive action—looking at the eyes of others—was already in decline in the first 6 months 
of life of infants with ASD (Jones & Klin, Nature, 2013). Interestingly, these findings contradicted prior hypotheses 
postulating an absence of social adaptive orientation in ASD from birth: early levels of eye-looking were not 
immediately diminished in infants later diagnosed with ASD; instead, these infants exhibited a slight but 
statistically significant increase in eye-looking at 2 months, which then declined. Together with evidence of early 
normative transitions from experience-expectant mechanisms (that is, largely subcortically-mediated ‘reflex-like’ 
predispositions) to experience-dependent ones (that is, largely cortically-mediated adaptive actions that build 
upon early newborn experiences), these data suggest a very specific hypothesis in ASD: reflex-like 
predispositions may be initially present, whilst early pivotal transitions, dependent upon the way in which initial 
predispositions are integrated into contingent social interaction, are disrupted. The proposed study will directly 
test this hypothesis. Aim 1 will identify brain networks associated with transitions from reflex-like/experience- 
expectant to interactive/experience-dependent forms of social adaptive action, and will identify the 
developmental phase—experience-expectant or experience-dependent—in which disruptions in brain and 
behavior first emerge in ASD. Aims 2 and 3 will identify aspects of brain maturation and early infant experience 
that are necessary and/or sufficient for guiding brain-behavior transitions over the first 6 months of life. Aim 2 will 
identify aspects of brain maturation that drive the emergence of sensitivity to social contingency, a critical 
mechanism of social interaction between infant and caregiver. Aim 3 will identify aspects of early infant 
experience that are necessary and/or sufficient for shaping the development of infant social brain networks. 
 Brain-behavior transitions will be measured in the same cohort of infants shared by Projects I-IV. Measures 
(in brain and behavior) are harmonized with Project V to facilitate comparisons between human and model 
systems. Anatomical, structural, and functional MRI scans will be collected at 3 time points between birth and 6 
months, and region-of-interest and network analyses will be used to characterize how subcortical and cortical 
networks interact and reorganize over infants’ first 6 months. Bidirectional relationships between developmental 
change in the brain and developmental change in behavior (measured in Projects I and II) will be examined using 
innovative statistical approaches for modeling time-varying longitudinal data ...

## Key facts

- **NIH application ID:** 10227972
- **Project number:** 5P50MH100029-10
- **Recipient organization:** EMORY UNIVERSITY
- **Principal Investigator:** Sarah Shultz
- **Activity code:** P50 (R01, R21, SBIR, etc.)
- **Funding institute:** NIH
- **Fiscal year:** 2021
- **Award amount:** $155,814
- **Award type:** 5
- **Project period:** 2012-09-04 → 2023-07-31

## Primary source

NIH RePORTER: https://reporter.nih.gov/project-details/10227972

## Citation

> US National Institutes of Health, RePORTER application 10227972, Pivotal Transitions in Early Infancy that Shape Network Development of the Social Brain (5P50MH100029-10). Retrieved via AI Analytics 2026-05-24 from https://api.ai-analytics.org/grant/nih/10227972. Licensed CC0.

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