Elsje van Bergen

Elsje van Bergen

Affiliated to Research

Associate Professor researching genetics, environment, learning, and neurodevelopment across generations.

Visiting address: Nobels väg 12a, 17165 Solna
Postal address: C8 Medicinsk epidemiologi och biostatistik, C8 MEB I Taylor, 171 77 Stockholm

About me

  • Dr Elsje van Bergen is an Associate Professor at Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam and Visiting Professor at the University of Oslo, and affiliated with Karolinska Institutet. Her research focuses on how genetic and environmental factors jointly shape individual differences in child development.

Research

  • I use genetically-informed designs, including twin and family-based approaches, combined with focused cohort data, genotyped family data, and register data. A central aim of my work is to understand why developmental outcomes cluster within families and to disentangle the causal mechanisms underlying these patterns.

    I study domains including language, reading, and maths learning, as well as neurodevelopmental conditions such as ADHD, autism, dyslexia, and dyscalculia, and their co-occurrence and links with mental health.

    I lead an ERC Starting Grant and additional competitive grants (including a VIDI Talent Grant and Jacobs Foundation funding). I currently supervise 2 postdoctoral researchers, 6 PhD candidates, 2 research assistants, and several MSc and BSc students, and have supervised 1 postdoc, 4 PhD students, and around 50 MSc and BSc students to completion.

    Honours and awards

    I am a Fellow of the Young Academy of Europe. I have received several international awards for my research, mentorship, and impact, including the Early Career Award from the International Dyslexia Association (2025), the Outstanding Paper, Early and Mid-Career Awards from the Society for the Scientific Study of Reading (2017, 2015 and 2024), the Early Career Impact Award from the Federation of Associations in Behavioral & Brain Sciences (2022), and the Rising Star Award from the Association for Psychological Science (2021).

Teaching

  • I teach at Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam in the Bachelor’s programme in Psychology and in the Research Master ‘Genes in Behaviour and Health’ (www.vu.nl/genes). My courses focus on research methods, grant writing, and science communication, and I am actively involved in supervising student research projects.

Articles

All other publications

Grants

  • VIDI Talent Grant
    Dutch Research Council (NWO)
    1 September 2024 - 31 August 2029
  • (Why) are there more men than women with autism? Sex differences in Autism: genes, brain and healthcare (SCANNER)
    Dutch Research Council
    15 January 2024
    Autism is diagnosed much more often in men than in women. Is this the result of biological differences, or male-centric science and healthcare with diagnostic 'blind spots'? With SCANNER, scientists will investigate both explanations and develop sensorimotor diagnostic tools to improve gender-sensitive care for people with autism.
  • ERC Starting Grant
    European Research Council (ERC)
    1 September 2023 - 31 August 2028
  • Jacobs Foundation
    1 January 2023 - 31 December 2026
  • The Research Council of Norway
    1 January 2023 - 31 December 2029
    Poor educational achievement and ADHD in childhood are a major risk factors for poor health and low income in adulthood. Poor educational outcomes tend to run in families, generating a cycle of inequality. Children whose parents talk and read less to them, tend to struggle in school. This parent-child association has been interpreted as a causal effect of parenting, but parents provide their children not only with a rearing environment, but also genes. We can only discover causal effects of the home learning environment (e.g., parent-child interactions, reading storybooks, household chaos) if we control for genetics or run an RCT. Our overarching aim is to discover which aspects of the home learning environment causally impact children’s risk of ADHD and learning difficulties. GenEd will use a variety of innovative observational and experimental designs. We will employ existing rich datasets and will collect novel data to triangulate three intergenerational designs. Using an online-learning platform, we will assess parent and child literacy and numeracy in 3000 twin families. In an RCT, 2000 of these families will get access to the online-learning platform to boost the home learning environment. GenEd will: 1. Include gene-environment interplay in studying children’s ADHD-symptoms, motivation, and literacy and numeracy skills 2. Discover which features of the home learning environment have a causal impact 3. Test the effectiveness of offering families an online-learning platform to practice literacy and numeracy GenEd ’s interdisciplinairity (representing education and genetics), combined with breakthroughs in statistical modelling, gene-finding work, and educational technology, make us uniquely suited to lead this timely project. GenEd has the ground-breaking opportunity to unravel the mechanisms underlying familial educational disadvantage. This will inform policy on how to target malleable causal mechanisms to ensure that all children can learn and thrive.
  • Netherlands Organisation for Health Research and Development
    1 May 2018
    Parents of lower socioeconomic status (SES) not only tend to have more health problems, but also tend to have offspring with more health problems. What remains a question is whether this association reflects a causal effect of SES on health, or reflects genetic or environmental confounding. Causality is typically studied by randomized controlled trials, where confounds are random over conditions and easily controlled for. However, it is not feasible to randomly allocate people to intervention conditions in which SES is altered, so to study causal influences of SES on health we rely on natural experiments. We propose to apply two natural experiments to study intergenerational causality. In these studies genetics serves as a research tool. Using this tool we will study effects of different SES indicators (e.g. educational attainment (EA), household income, and social deprivation) on physical and mental health outcomes. In the first design, referred to as the twin discordance design, we will study genetically-identical (i.e., monozygotic or MZ) twins who differ in (so are discordant for) the SES indicator. Does the twin member who is of lower SES compared to his/her co-twin also suffer poorer health? If so, this strengthens the evidence for a causal relation between SES and health, because the association is controlled for genetic and childhood confounders, as these are identical in MZ twins. In the second design, the intergenerational (Mendelian randomization, or MR) design, we study the effects of parental and offspring SES on offspring health outcomes. We leverage the fact that each offspring within a nuclear family inherits a mixture of genetic variants from both parents, in some cases inheriting more SES increasing (vs. decreasing) genetic variants, rendering his or her genetic predisposition for SES above (vs. below) that of his/her parents. As genotypes which predispose to higher or lower SES are inherited randomly, they form the perfect basis for natural experiments. The genetic predispositions are utilized as instruments to identify the ’true’ effect of SES on health. This intergenerational design enables us to study the effect of both parental and offspring SES on health. At the etiological level, individual differences in SES can be explained by the interplay of genetic and environmental differences. Consider for example EA, important influences on EA are IQ and personality, which in turn are influenced by genes and environmental factors. Hence, the complex multifactorial construct of SES is also influenced, but not determined, by genes. That is, differences among people in SES are partly due to genetic differences, like a genetic predisposition to ease-of-learning and perseverance. The twin discordance and intergenerational MR design will be employed to test causal effects of aspects of SES on health, in particular cardio-metabolic (e.g., myocardial infarction and type II diabetes) and mental health (e.g., depression and ADHD). These outcomes are prevalent and impose a heavy burden on affected individuals, families, and society at large. As it also conceivable that health problems lead to lower SES, we test for the presence of causality in either direction. To realize this project we will combine three rich and unique research facilities: the Netherlands Twin Register (NTR), Statistics Netherlands (CBS), and the Geoscience and Health Cohort Consortium (GECCO). NTR includes thousands of twin families with longitudinal health and genetic data and very good national coverage (see: Figure 1 Together these resources provide wide variety of SES indicators, which, if added to the models separately, can shed light on the mechanism(s) of how SES influences health. In addition, CBS (diagnosis and hospital data) and NTR (questionnaire and self-report) provide a wealth of health outcome data. Replication of findings will be performed in international twin registers with access to similar data. The project can implicate and address the causality of the association between SES and health outcomes. Malleable behaviors and exposures that are causally implicated provide evidence-based targets for future interventions to improve health outcomes. Behaviors and exposures that are associated with mental or cardio-metabolic health, but not because of causal mechanisms, can be discarded as intervention targets, saving valuable time and resources. Consider, for example, the finding that a failure to complete secondary education causally predisposes poor health outcomes, but only in those with a lower parental SES. The ability to easily identify those at risk for poor health outcomes, allows for the selective application of preventative programs (e.g. adult education), and risk screening (e.g. population screening for certain disease at earlier ages dependent on educational background). Thus, findings will improve health-economic modeling of the consequences of social inequality, and thus shape effective policy.
  • Dutch Research Council
    1 January 2016 - 30 November 2020
  • Dutch Research Council
    1 October 2012 - 30 September 2015
  • Consortium on Individual Development
    Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO)

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