cohort · 2015 · en
Family Income, Parental Education and Brain Structure in Children and Adolescents
Noble KG, Houston SM, Brito NH, Bartsch H, Kan E, Kuperman JM, et al.
Nature Neuroscience 18(5):773-778
Evidencia · SeminalOpen Access
Síntesis
PING study (n=1,099, ages 3-20): family income shows logarithmic association with cortical surface area in language and executive regions; effects largest at lowest income levels. Major paper on SES-brain gradient.
Etapas
3-6, 6-12, 12-18
Dominios
neuroscience, ses-poverty, cognitive-development
Tags
SES · cortical-surface-area · income-brain-gradient · PING · Noble · Houston
Afirmaciones que citan esta fuente (1)
clm-ses-brain-gradient
Family socioeconomic status shows a robust, logarithmic association with cortical surface area in language and executive regions of the developing brain, with the steepest effects at the lowest income levels and partial mediation by caregiver support and chronic stress.