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Polygence Scholar2026
Simren Bindra's profile

Simren Bindra

Class of 2027San Marino, California

About

Hello! My name is Simren Bindra, and my project is on early life adversity and developmental psychopathology. I chose to work on this project because I am passionate about understanding how childhood experiences shape mental health and development. After completing my project, my paper was published in a peer-reviewed academic journal, and I hope to continue conducting psychology research in college and beyond.

Projects

  • "Rethinking the “Threat” Dimension: Heterogeneity, Mechanisms, and Developmental Pathways in Early Life Adversity" with mentor Phil (June 30, 2026)

Project Portfolio

Rethinking the “Threat” Dimension: Heterogeneity, Mechanisms, and Developmental Pathways in Early Life Adversity

Started July 10, 2025

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Abstract or project description

Early life adversity is a known predictor of psychopathology and dimensional models distinguishing threat and deprivation have advanced our understanding of how distinct adverse experiences shape neurodevelopment. However, it remains unclear whether the current paradigm adequately captures the heterogeneity of threat-related experiences and their diverse developmental consequences. This review synthesizes evidence from epidemiological, neurobiological, clinical, and longitudinal research to clarify the various pathways and consequences of early threats. We review findings demonstrating that threat-related childhood adversity is strongly associated with alterations in affective neurocircuitry, stress physiology, attentional bias, and biological aging. Across multiple levels of analysis, early threat exposure shows consistent links to emotional learning, danger detection, and stress responsivity, distinguishing it from deprivation, which more strongly affects cognitive and linguistic development. Longitudinal and experimental evidence on early threats also reveals substantial heterogeneity in outcomes, with effects varying as a function of timing, chronicity, context, and measurement. We argue that current approaches often operationalize threat too broadly, collapsing distinct experiences such as violence exposure, emotional maltreatment, and contextual insecurity into a single construct. This lack of granularity limits predictive precision and obscures important mechanistic pathways. We conclude by proposing directions for refinement, including more precise measures of emotional and contextual threats, integration of biological and social data, and use of deep phenotyping and computational approaches to better map developmental trajectories across individuals.