Noble Kimberly G, McCandliss Bruce D, Farah Martha J
University of Pennsylvania Center for Cognitive Neuroscience, PA, USA.
Dev Sci. 2007 Jul;10(4):464-80. doi: 10.1111/j.1467-7687.2007.00600.x.
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.
社会经济地位(SES)与儿童认知成就相关。在先前的研究中,我们发现这种关联具有神经特异性;具体而言,我们发现低社会经济地位和中等社会经济地位儿童群体在颞周/语言和前额叶/执行能力方面相对于其他神经认知能力存在不成比例的差异。在此,我们探讨几个新问题:群体之间的这种差异在多大程度上反映了与社会经济地位相关的神经认知发展个体差异的梯度,而非更具分类性的差异?作为社会经济地位的函数,个体之间还有哪些神经认知系统存在差异?语言能力是否介导了其他系统中社会经济地位的差异?以及特定的前额叶/执行子系统如何随社会经济地位而变化?对150名健康的、社会经济背景各异的一年级学生进行了测试,这些测试涉及语言、视觉空间技能、记忆、工作记忆、认知控制和奖励处理等任务。社会经济地位解释了语言方面超过30%的方差,以及大多数其他系统中较小但高度显著的方差部分。文中还讨论了统计中介因素和可能的干预方法。