Dr. Kyle Wiley
Kyle Wiley is a human biologist and biological anthropologist interested in the contribution of social, political, and traumatic stressors to disparities in maternal and child health during the perinatal and early postpartum periods in the United States and Brazil. He completed his PhD in Anthropology from Yale Ãå±±ÂÖ¼é in 2020 and a postdoctoral fellowship at the Ãå±±ÂÖ¼é of California, Los Angeles in 2023. He uses biosocial approaches to investigate how these factors interact with biological processes to shape patterns of health disparities, particularly among Latina/os influence the risk of adverse pregnancy, postpartum, maternal, and infant health and developmental outcomes. He is interested in research on mechanisms of embodiment and the intergenerational consequences of stress, including epigenetics, hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis function, inflammation and immunoregulation, the microbiome, and cardiovascular physiology. His research has been funded by the National Science Foundation, the Wenner-Gren Foundation, and the National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities.
Link to Personal Website :
Selected Publications:
Wiley KS, Kwon D, Knorr DA, Fox M. 2024. Regulatory T-cell phenotypes in prenatal psychological distress. Brain, Behavior, and Immunity, 116: 62-69.
Wiley KS, Gregg A, Fox M, Lagishetty V, Sandman C, Jacobs J, and Glynn L. 2024. Contact with caregivers is associated with composition of the infant gut microbiome across the first year of life. American Journal of Biological Anthropology, 183(4), e24858.
Wiley KS, Knorr D, Chua C, Garcia S, and Fox M. 2023. Sociopolitical stressors are associated with psychological distress in a cohort of Latina women during early pregnancy. Journal of Community Psychology, 51(7): 3044-3059.
Wiley KS, Fox M, Gilder T, and Thayer Z. 2023. A longitudinal study of how women’s prenatal and postnatal stress related to the COVID-19 pandemic predicts their infants’ social-emotional development. Child Development, 94(5): 1356-1367.
Wiley KS, Camilo C, Gouveia G, Euclydes V, Panter-Brick C, Matijasevich A, Ferraro A, Fracolli L, Chiesa A, Miguel E, Polanczyk G, Brentani H. 2023. Maternal distress, DNA methylation, and fetal programming of stress physiology in Brazilian mother-infant pairs. Developmental Psychobiology, 65 (1): e22352.