Margolis Amy E, Dranovsky Alex, Pagliaccio David, Azad Gazi, Rauh Virginia, Herbstman Julie
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Health, Wexner Medical Center, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, USA.
Child Mind Institute, New York, NY, USA.
J Child Psychol Psychiatry. 2025 Apr;66(4):547-568. doi: 10.1111/jcpp.14137.
Although awareness of the role of environmental exposures in children's cognitive development is increasing, learning difficulties have not yet been a major focus of environmental health science. Learning difficulties disproportionately affect children living in economic disadvantage, yielding an 'achievement gap.' Studies examining the neurobiology of reading and math have mostly included economically advantaged youth, leaving a great deal unknown about the neural underpinnings of reading and math difficulties in youth living in disadvantaged contexts. Critically, due to environmental injustice, these youth are disproportionately exposed to environmental neurotoxicants. Herein, we review literature supporting a theoretical framework of environmentally associated phenotypes of learning difficulties. We propose that prenatal exposure to neurotoxicants and early-life exposure to psychosocial stressors increases risk for learning difficulties via effects on neural circuits that support cognitive processes which, in addition to literacy and numeracy, are integral to acquiring and performing academic skills. We describe models in which (1) prenatal exposure to air pollution has a main effect on learning via brain structure and function or associated domain-general cognitive processes and (2) a joint 'two-hit' pathway in which prenatal air pollution exposure followed by early life stress-when combined and sequential-increases risk for learning difficulties also via effects on brain structure, function, and/or associated cognitive processes. We review a select literature documenting effects of exposure to pollutants and early life stress on relevant neural circuits and associated cognitive processes in animal models and parallel findings in human epidemiologic studies. We advocate for team science in which researchers, practitioners, and policymakers collaborate to increase health literacy about environmentally associated phenotypes of learning difficulties and support the development of precision-oriented instructional and environmental intervention methods for youth living in economic disadvantage.
尽管人们越来越意识到环境暴露在儿童认知发展中的作用,但学习困难尚未成为环境卫生科学的主要关注焦点。学习困难对生活在经济弱势环境中的儿童影响尤为严重,导致了“成就差距”。研究阅读和数学神经生物学的大多是经济条件优越的青少年,对于生活在弱势环境中的青少年阅读和数学困难的神经基础,我们仍知之甚少。至关重要的是,由于环境不公,这些青少年过多地暴露于环境神经毒素中。在此,我们回顾支持学习困难环境相关表型理论框架的文献。我们提出,产前暴露于神经毒素和早年暴露于心理社会压力源会通过影响支持认知过程的神经回路增加学习困难的风险,这些认知过程除读写和计算能力外,对于获取和运用学术技能也至关重要。我们描述了以下模型:(1)产前暴露于空气污染通过大脑结构和功能或相关的一般认知过程对学习产生主要影响;(2)一种联合的“两次打击”途径,即产前暴露于空气污染后紧接着早年经历压力,当两者结合且相继发生时,也会通过对大脑结构、功能和/或相关认知过程的影响增加学习困难的风险。我们回顾了一部分文献,这些文献记录了动物模型中污染物暴露和早年压力对相关神经回路及相关认知过程的影响,以及人类流行病学研究中的类似发现。我们倡导团队科学,即研究人员、从业者和政策制定者合作,提高对学习困难环境相关表型的健康认知,并支持为生活在经济弱势环境中的青少年开发精准导向的教学和环境干预方法。