Department of Pediatrics, Division of Developmental Medicine, Boston Children's Hospital, 1 Autumn Street, Boston, MA 02115, United States; Harvard Medical School, 25 Shattuck St., Boston, MA 02115, United States.
Department of Pediatrics, Division of Developmental Medicine, Boston Children's Hospital, 1 Autumn Street, Boston, MA 02115, United States.
Cognition. 2021 Aug;213:104600. doi: 10.1016/j.cognition.2021.104600. Epub 2021 Jan 26.
Exposure to high levels of early life stress have been associated with long-term difficulties in learning, behavior, and health, with particular impact evident in the language domain. While some have proposed that the increased stress of living in a low-income household mediates observed associations between socioeconomic status (SES) and child outcomes, considerable individual differences have been observed. The extent to which specific variables associated with socioeconomic status - in particular exposure to stressful life events - influence the neurocognitive mechanisms underlying language acquisition are not well understood. Auditory statistical learning, or the ability to segment a continuous auditory stream based on its statistical properties, develops during early infancy and is one mechanism thought to underlie language learning. The present study used an event-related potential (ERP) paradigm to test whether maternal stress, adjusting for socioeconomic variables (e.g., family income, maternal education) was associated with neurocognitive processes underlying statistical learning in a sample of 26-month-old children (n = 23) from predominantly low- to middle-income backgrounds. Event-related potentials were recorded while children listened to a continuous stream of tri-tone "words" in which tone elements varied in transitional probability. "Tone-words" were presented in random order, such that Tone 1 always predicted Tones 2 and 3 (transitional probability for Tone 3 = 1.0), but Tone 1 appeared randomly. A larger P2 amplitude was observed in response to Tone 3 compared to Tone 1, demonstrating that children implicitly tracked differences in transitional probabilities during passive listening. Maternal reports of stress at 26 months, adjusting for SES, were negatively associated with difference in P2 amplitude between Tones 1 and 3. These findings suggest that maternal stress, within a low-SES context, is associated with the manner in which children process statistical properties of auditory input.
早期生活中接触到的高水平压力与学习、行为和健康方面的长期困难有关,在语言领域尤为明显。虽然有人提出,生活在低收入家庭的压力增加,会缓和社会经济地位(SES)与儿童结果之间的关联,但也观察到了相当大的个体差异。与社会经济地位相关的特定变量(尤其是生活压力事件的暴露)在何种程度上影响语言习得的神经认知机制,目前还不太清楚。听觉统计学习,或者根据其统计属性分割连续听觉流的能力,在婴儿早期发展,是一种被认为是语言学习基础的机制。本研究使用事件相关电位(ERP)范式,在一个主要来自中低收入背景的 26 个月大的儿童样本(n=23)中,测试了母亲压力(调整了社会经济变量,如家庭收入、母亲教育)是否与统计学习的神经认知过程有关。当儿童听连续的三音“单词”时,记录事件相关电位,其中声调元素的变化在过渡概率中。“声调词”以随机顺序呈现,因此 Tone1 总是预测 Tone2 和 Tone3(Tone3 的过渡概率为 1.0),但 Tone1 是随机出现的。与 Tone1 相比,儿童对 Tone3 的反应中观察到更大的 P2 振幅,表明儿童在被动聆听时隐含地跟踪了过渡概率的差异。26 个月时,SES 调整后的母亲压力报告与 Tone1 和 Tone3 之间的 P2 振幅差异呈负相关。这些发现表明,在低 SES 背景下,母亲的压力与儿童处理听觉输入的统计属性的方式有关。