“…Elevated maternal stress hormones and other stress‐related physiological changes may affect fetal neurodevelopment directly or through epigenetic processes, impacting the structure and function of brain areas important to the developing stress response and future behavior (Bale, ; Charil, Laplante, Vaillancourt, & King, ; Glover, O'Connor, & O'Donnell, ; Monk, Spicer, & Champagne, ). In humans, prenatal maternal stress (PNMS) has been operationalized variably as psychological distress (e.g., pregnancy‐specific anxiety or depressive symptoms) or stressful life events (e.g., bereavement, daily hassles), with evidence of associations with increased emotional, behavioral, and social problems in childhood (Lahti et al., ; Lin, Crnic, Luecken, & Gonzales, ; O'Connor, Heron, Golding, Beveridge, & Glover, ; Robinson et al., ). Nevertheless, despite these associations, conjecture remains concerning the mechanisms and moderators of the influence of PNMS on infant and child outcomes.…”