Literature DB >> 18308588

Socioeconomic status predicts hemispheric specialisation of the left inferior frontal gyrus in young children.

Rajeev D S Raizada1, Todd L Richards, Andrew Meltzoff, Patricia K Kuhl.   

Abstract

Reading is a complex skill that is not mastered by all children. At the age of 5, on the cusp of prereading development, many factors combine to influence a child's future reading success, including neural and behavioural factors such as phonological awareness and the auditory processing of phonetic input, and environmental factors, such as socioeconomic status (SES). We investigated the interactions between these factors in 5-year-old children by administering a battery of standardised cognitive and linguistic tests, measuring SES with a standardised scale, and using fMRI to record neural activity during a behavioral task, rhyming, that is predictive of reading skills. Correlation tests were performed, and then corrected for multiple comparisons using the false discovery rate (FDR) procedure. It emerged that only one relationship linking neural with behavioural or environmental factors survived as significant after FDR correction: a correlation between SES and the degree of hemispheric specialisation in the left inferior frontal gyrus (IFG), a region which includes Broca's area. This neural-environmental link remained significant even after controlling for the children's scores on the standardised language and cognition tests. In order to investigate possible environmental influences on the left IFG further, grey and white matter volumes were calculated. Marginally significant correlations with SES were found, indicating that environmental effects may manifest themselves in the brain anatomically as well as functionally. Collectively, these findings suggest that the weaker language skills of low-SES children are related to reduced underlying neural specialisation, and that these neural problems go beyond what is revealed by behavioural tests alone.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18308588      PMCID: PMC2679945          DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2008.01.021

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neuroimage        ISSN: 1053-8119            Impact factor:   6.556


  31 in total

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3.  Thresholding of statistical maps in functional neuroimaging using the false discovery rate.

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4.  Neural systems for compensation and persistence: young adult outcome of childhood reading disability.

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  83 in total

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Review 2.  Socioeconomic status and the brain: mechanistic insights from human and animal research.

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3.  Regional gray matter volume mediates the relationship between family socioeconomic status and depression-related trait in a young healthy sample.

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Review 5.  Neurocognitive development in socioeconomic context: Multiple mechanisms and implications for measuring socioeconomic status.

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6.  Parental socioeconomic status and the neural basis of arithmetic: differential relations to verbal and visuo-spatial representations.

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7.  The relationship between socioeconomic status and white matter microstructure in pre-reading children: A longitudinal investigation.

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8.  Rapid Infant Prefrontal Cortex Development and Sensitivity to Early Environmental Experience.

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9.  The relationship between maternal education and the neural substrates of phoneme perception in children: Interactions between socioeconomic status and proficiency level.

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Review 10.  State of the Art Review: Poverty and the Developing Brain.

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