Assari Shervin
Department of Family Medicine, Charles R Drew University of Medicine and Science, Los Angeles, CA 90059, USA.
Brain Sci. 2020 May 21;10(5):312. doi: 10.3390/brainsci10050312.
Non-Hispanic Black (NHB) youth are at a higher risk of high-risk behaviors compared to non-Hispanic White (NHW) youth. Some of this racial gap is shown to be due to weaker effects of parental educational attainment on reducing the prevalence of behavioral risk factors such as impulsivity, substance use, aggression, obesity, and poor school performance for NHBs, a pattern called Minorities' Diminished Returns. These diminishing returns may be due to lower than expected effects of parental education on inhibitory control.
We compared NHW and NHB youth for the effect of parental educational attainment on youth inhibitory control, a psychological and cognitive construct that closely predicts high-risk behaviors such as the use of drugs, alcohol, and tobacco.
This was a cross-sectional analysis that included 4188 youth from the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) study. The independent variable was parental educational attainment. The main outcome was youth inhibitory control measured by the stop-signal task (SST), which was validated by parent reports on the Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL).
In race/ethnicity-stratified models, high parental educational attainment was associated with a higher level of inhibitory control for NHB than NHW youth. In the pooled sample, race/ethnicity showed a statistically significant interaction with parental educational attainment on youth inhibitory control suggesting that high parental educational attainment has a smaller boosting effect on inhibitory control for NHB than NHW youth.
Parental educational attainment boosts inhibitory control for NHW but not NHB youth. To minimize the racial gap in youth brain development, we need to address societal barriers that diminish the returns of family economic and human resources, particularly parental educational attainment, for racial and ethnic minority youth. Social and public policies should address structural and societal barriers such as social stratification, segregation, racism, and discrimination that hinder NHB parents' abilities to effectively mobilize their human resources and secure tangible outcomes for their developing youth.
与非西班牙裔白人(NHW)青年相比,非西班牙裔黑人(NHB)青年从事高风险行为的风险更高。这种种族差距部分原因在于,父母教育程度对减少行为风险因素(如冲动、物质使用、攻击行为、肥胖和学业成绩差)的患病率的影响较弱,这种模式被称为少数族裔回报递减。这些回报递减可能是由于父母教育对抑制控制的影响低于预期。
我们比较了NHW和NHB青年中父母教育程度对青年抑制控制的影响,抑制控制是一种心理和认知结构,能密切预测药物、酒精和烟草使用等高风险行为。
这是一项横断面分析,纳入了来自青少年大脑认知发展(ABCD)研究的4188名青年。自变量是父母教育程度。主要结果是通过停止信号任务(SST)测量的青年抑制控制,该任务通过父母对儿童行为清单(CBCL)的报告进行验证。
在按种族/族裔分层的模型中,与NHW青年相比,父母教育程度高与NHB青年更高水平的抑制控制相关。在汇总样本中,种族/族裔在青年抑制控制方面与父母教育程度存在统计学上的显著交互作用,这表明与NHW青年相比,父母教育程度高对NHB青年抑制控制的促进作用较小。
父母教育程度提高了NHW青年的抑制控制,但对NHB青年没有作用。为了尽量减少青年大脑发育中的种族差距,我们需要消除那些减少种族和族裔少数青年家庭经济和人力资源(特别是父母教育程度)回报的社会障碍。社会和公共政策应解决社会分层、隔离、种族主义和歧视等结构性和社会障碍,这些障碍阻碍了NHB父母有效调动其人力资源并为其成长中的青年取得切实成果的能力。