Michigan [US]: A significant new study suggests that growing up in a low-income family may have long-term effects on children's brain development. By the time they are in the upper grades of elementary school, children from families with fewer resources have different patterns of connections between their many regions and networks of the brain compared to children from more affluent homes and neighbourhoods. The number of years of education a child's parents has, according to a new study led by two University of Michigan neuroscientists and published in Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience, stood out in the study as being more significant to brain development than other socioeconomic factors.
But as the researchers dug deeper, they found that there are other factors that can affect brain connectivity besides the number of diplomas or degrees parents have earned. Additionally, they discovered a place for parenting practices like reading to kids, discussing ideas with them, taking them to museums, or engaging in other cognitively stimulating activities.
The new study uses behavioural and brain scan data from more than 5,800 tween children from various socioeconomic backgrounds across the country. The term "functional connectomes" refers to maps of interconnectivity across hundreds of brain regions, and this study represents the most comprehensive examination of how socioeconomic factors influence children. It's also potentially relevant to public policy. One in seven American children lives in poverty using the standard definition, and half qualify for free or reduced school lunches.
"We need to better understand how social and economic inequality shapes children's brains as they grow and develop, and our results point to a key role for parents' education levels and the kind of enrichment they provide at home," says Chandra Sripada, M.D., PhD, the lead author and a professor of psychiatry and philosophy at U-M. "Because of our sample size and 'brain-wide' analysis approach, we feel this study's results are more reliable than previous work, which tended to look at a few dozen children and a small set of brain regions at a time."
Scans and socioeconomics: The nationwide ABCD Study research project, which enrolled more than 11,000 kids at 22 sites across the country, including hundreds who participated through the University of Michigan Department of Psychiatry and Addiction Center, allowed for the large study size. Data from more than half of them, including fMRI (functional magnetic resonance imaging) brain scans, were used to create the new study.
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When the kids were lying motionless in the scanner during those scans, their brain activity was recorded. Neuroscientists can observe the volume of activity between various brain regions in this relaxed state, as well as the functional connections that form from before birth through childhood and adolescence. To make sure that their conclusions are as reliable as possible, Sripada and his colleagues, including senior author and professor of psychiatry Mary Heitzeg, PhD, conducted three analyses of the data: across the entire brain, across all major networks within the brain, and across all individual brain connections.