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Socioeconomic gradients predict individual differences in neurocognitive abilities

Authors :
Martha J. Farah
Kimberly G. Noble
Bruce D. McCandliss
Source :
Developmental science. 10(4)
Publication Year :
2007

Abstract

Socioeconomic status (SES) is associated with childhood cognitive achievement. In previous research we found that this association shows neural specificity; specifically we found that groups of low and middle SES children differed disproportionately in perisylvian/language and prefrontal/executive abilities relative to other neurocognitive abilities. Here we address several new questions: To what extent does this disparity between groups reflect a gradient of SES-related individual differences in neurocognitive development, as opposed to a more categorical difference? What other neurocognitive systems differ across individuals as a function of SES? Does linguistic ability mediate SES differences in other systems? And how do specific prefrontal/executive subsystems vary with SES? One hundred and fifty healthy, socioeconomically diverse first-graders were administered tasks tapping language, visuospatial skills, memory, working memory, cognitive control, and reward processing. SES explained over 30% of the variance in language, and a smaller but highly significant portion of the variance in most other systems. Statistically mediating factors and possible interventional approaches are discussed.

Details

ISSN :
1363755X
Volume :
10
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Developmental science
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ff2a2136f284281ade048bb73471af53