Kathryn L. Humphreys

Associate Professor of Psychology and Human Development Vanderbilt University

  • Nashville TN

A clinical psychologist with expertise in infant mental health.

Contact

Vanderbilt University

View more experts managed by Vanderbilt University

Spotlight

3 min

Infant seating devices may reduce language exposure

When a parent needs to cook dinner or take a shower, often they will place their baby in a bouncy seat, swing, exersaucer, or similar seating device intended to protect the baby and grant a degree of independence to both the parent and infant. For many parents, these devices represent a helpful extra set of hands; for babies, the freedom to safely explore their immediate surroundings. As useful as these devices are to both parents and infants, they may present trade-offs regarding their effect on infants’ exposure to adult language, which is critical for language development. That’s according to a new study by researchers at the Stress and Early Adversity Lab at Vanderbilt Peabody College of education and human development. Within infants’ natural environments and daily routines, the study explored interactions between their exposure to adult language and their placement in seating devices, which support posture and promote the infant’s ability to play with objects or observe their surroundings without direct support from a caregiver. The researchers found that infants were exposed to fewer words when spending time in seating devices compared to when spending time in other placements. They also found that infants who spent the most time in seating devices heard nearly 40 percent fewer daily words compared to infants who spent the least amount of time in seating devices. Infants with more, compared to less, seating device use also had less consistent exposure to adult language throughout the day. Sixty mothers and their 4to 6-month-old infants participated in this study. For three days, a Language Environment Analysis audio recording device (i.e. “talk pedometer”) captured language exposure. The mothers inserted the audio recorder into the pocket of a vest their babies wore. Automated software estimated from the recordings the total number of adult words spoken to or near the infant over the course of a day. To record real-time behaviors of infant placement, the mothers responded to 12 brief surveys per day about their infant’s current location and use of seating devices. Caregiver reports of their child’s placement in seating devices accounted for 10 percent of an infant’s daily exposure to adult words, which the researchers say is a striking finding due to the complex nature of language exposure and how many other factors may influence children’s exposure to speech (e.g. caregiver’s talkativeness, presence of other siblings). Kathryn Humphreys, assistant professor of psychology and human development and expert in infant and early childhood mental health, is the senior author of the study. She notes that infant seating devices can provide a convenient way to keep infants safely contained while caregivers attend to other tasks. However, given the potential for frequent and prolonged use of these devices, she says that parents may want to be intentional about interactive opportunities while the infant explores their surroundings as well as consider wearing or otherwise carrying their infant on their body as much as possible to create more opportunities for engagement through speech. “While we need more research to be certain that seating devices reduce the richness of infants’ language environments, these findings are influencing my own decisions about intentional placement with my 6-month-old." Kathryn Humphreys Kathryn Humphreys She suggests that safe and convenient places are a boon for both infants and their caregivers, but that there is a risk for reduced levels of interactions when infants are stationary and not moving to where their caregivers are active.

Kathryn L. Humphreys

1 min

Childhood psychology expert on migrant children at U.S.-Mexico border

Kathryn Humphreys, assistant professor, department of psychology and human development, is available for commentary on the influx of migrant children at the border and group-based housing for these children. Kathryn received her doctoral degree in clinical psychology and has expertise in infant and early childhood mental health. Her research focuses on characterizing the early environment and examining links to later life outcomes.  Some of her recent research finds that stressful or traumatic experiences occurring in a child’s earliest years—birth to age 5—have been linked to reduced hippocampal volume in adolescence, which is connected to learning, memory and mood.

Kathryn L. Humphreys

Multimedia

Biography

Dr. Kathryn Humphreys is an Associate Professor of Psychology and Human Development at Vanderbilt University. She has a doctoral degree in clinical psychology and expertise in infant and early childhood mental health and developmental neuroscience. Her research program includes both basic and applied work, and she has published more than 170 peer-reviewed articles and book chapters on child development, adversity, and caregiving. Dr. Humphreys has received several awards, including the NSF CAREER Award, the NIMH Biobehavioral Research Awards for Innovative New Scientists (NIMH BRAINS) award, the Janet Taylor Spence Award for Transformative Early Career Contributions from the Association for Psychological Science, and the Boyd McCandless Award from the American Psychological Association.

Areas of Expertise

Tender Age Detainment Centers
Infants and Toddlers
Orphanages
Parent Child Separations
Migrant Youth
Trauma in Youth
Stress and Early Adversity
Clinical Psychology
Adoption
Childhood Adversity
Mental Health

Accomplishments

Vanderbilt University Chancellor Faculty Fellow

2024-2026

Vanderbilt University Randolph Blake Early Career Award

2023

Vanderbilt University Chancellor's Award for Research

2023

Show All +

Education

University of California

Ph.D.

Clinical Psychology

2014

University of California

M.A.

Psychology

2009

Harvard Graduate School of Education

Ed.M.

Risk and Prevention

2006

Show All +

Affiliations

  • Provost search committee member, Stanford University
  • Society of Clinical Psychology (Division 12 of the APA)
  • Psychology in Action

Selected Media Appearances

Mom Guilt is Real—And Here are 13 Ways to Overcome It in Any Situation

Parade  online

2022-03-03

Parent guilt happens when you don’t meet those goals or standards that you’ve built up in your mind, even if you know on some level that they’re not attainable. “When parents feel that they are falling short of their expectations or goals, guilt is a normal emotional response,” says Kathryn Humphreys, Ph.D., assistant professor of psychology at Vanderbilt University Peabody College of Education and Human Development.

View More

Human-rights groups are urging the Biden administration to get children out of the makeshift Border Patrol facilities

Insider  online

2021-03-23

"Even short stays in detention centers have the potential to be traumatic experiences," said Kathryn Humphreys, assistant professor of psychology and human development at Vanderbilt University.

View More

Quarantine Diaries: How I Stopped Feeling Guilty About ‘Me Time’ During the Pandemic

Parade  online

2020-09-16

arent guilt happens when you don’t meet those goals or standards that you’ve built up in your mind, even if you know on some level that they’re not attainable. “When parents feel that they are falling short of their expectations or goals, guilt is a normal emotional response,” says KathrynHumphreys, Ph.D., assistant professor of psychology at Vanderbilt University Peabody College of Education and Human Development.

View More

Show All +

Selected Articles

Irritability and Brain Volume in Adolescents: Cross-sectional and Longitudinal Associations

Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience

Emily L Dennis, Kathryn L Humphreys, Lucy S King, Paul M Thompson, Ian H Gotlib

2019

Irritability is garnering increasing attention in psychiatric research as a transdiagnostic marker of both internalizing and externalizing disorders. These disorders often emerge during adolescence, highlighting the need to examine changes in the brain and in psychological functioning during this developmental period.

View more

Disinhibited Social Engagement Disorder in Early Childhood Predicts Reduced Competence in Early Adolescence

Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology

Katherine L Guyon-Harris, Kathryn L Humphreys, Devi Miron, Mary Margaret Gleason, Charles A Nelson, Nathan A Fox, Charles H Zeanah

2019

Psychosocial deprivation is associated with the development of socially aberrant behaviors, including signs of disinhibited social engagement disorder (DSED). In longitudinal studies, signs of DSED have been shown to decrease over time, especially as children are removed from conditions of deprivation.

View more

Early life stress, cortisol, frontolimbic connectivity, and depressive symptoms during puberty

Development and Psychopathology

Katharina Kircanski, Lucinda M Sisk, Tiffany C Ho, Kathryn L Humphreys, Lucy S King, Natalie L Colich, Sarah J Ordaz, Ian H Gotlib

2019

Early life stress (ELS) is a risk factor for the development of depression in adolescence; the mediating neurobiological mechanisms, however, are unknown. In this study, we examined in early pubertal youth the associations among ELS, cortisol stress responsivity, and white matter microstructure of the uncinate fasciculus and the fornix, two key frontolimbic tracts; we also tested whether and how these variables predicted depressive symptoms in later puberty.

View more