“…A recent study with an animal model of schizophrenia (Li et al, 2007) showed that a brief induction of a DISC1 mutant allele during postnatal development, but not in adults, is sufficient to trigger many of the phenotypes associated with this neurodevelopmental disorder (Weinberger, 1987). Clinical experience with endocrine and metabolic disorders also stresses the importance of insults during vulnerable periods of development: hypothyroidism and phenylketonuria, for example, can lead to profound and irreversible cognitive disability when left uncorrected during developmental periods, while they appear to have milder effects in adults (Davis and Tremont, 2007; Dugbartey, 1998; Hanley, 2004; Rovet and Daneman, 2003; Zoeller and Rovet, 2004). Nevertheless, there are many other examples of pathologies where the opposite is true: for example, trauma, infection, and ischemia may have much of the same or even more dire effects in adults than in developing organisms (Kolb et al, 2000; Vannucci and Hagberg, 2004).…”