University of California, Davis.
J Res Adolesc. 2018 Mar;28(1):103-120. doi: 10.1111/jora.12340.
The present study examined adolescents' neural responses to social exclusion as a mediator of past exposure to a hostile school environment (HSE) and later social deviance, and whether family connectedness buffered these associations. Participants (166 Mexican-origin adolescents, 54.4% female) reported on their HSE exposure and family connectedness across Grades 9-11. Six months later, neural responses to social exclusion were measured. Finally, social deviance was self-reported in Grades 9 and 12. The HSE-social deviance link was mediated by greater reactivity to social deviance in subgenual anterior cingulate cortex, a region from the social pain network also implicated in social susceptibility. However, youths with stronger family bonds were protected from this neurobiologically mediated path. These findings suggest a complex interplay of risk and protective factors that impact adolescent behavior through the brain.
本研究考察了青少年在社会排斥下的神经反应,以此作为其过去经历敌对学校环境(HSE)和后来社会偏差的中介,以及家庭联系是否缓冲了这些关联。参与者(166 名墨西哥裔青少年,54.4%为女性)在 9-11 年级期间报告了他们的 HSE 暴露和家庭联系。6 个月后,测量了他们对社会排斥的神经反应。最后,在 9 年级和 12 年级自我报告了社会偏差。HSE-社会偏差的联系是通过前扣带皮质亚区对社会偏差的反应性增强来介导的,这是社会疼痛网络中的一个区域,也与社会易感性有关。然而,与家庭联系更强的青少年则免受这种神经生物学介导的影响。这些发现表明,风险和保护因素的复杂相互作用通过大脑影响青少年的行为。