Research Says ''Childhood Poverty Produces Smaller Brains''
The rich really are different, at least when it comes to their brains.
In two separate studies, researchers found that experiencing poverty in
early childhood is linked to smaller brain size and less efficient
processing of certain sensory information.
Previous work suggested that poverty can contribute to compromised
cognitive function and low performance in schools, but using imaging,
researchers have documented measurable changes in the brain tied to
poverty.
In one study, published in JAMA Pediatrics, children who grew up in
impoverished households showed smaller white and grey matter in their
brains compared with those who had more means — these make up the
density of nerve connections between different parts of the brain. The
less wealthy kids also developed smaller hippocampus and amygdala
regions, which are involved in regulating attention, memory and
emotions.
According to the researchers from Washington University School of
Medicine in St. Louis, the smaller brain regions may be due to the
increased stress and anxiety that these children experience growing up
in families where finances are tight, and therefore parental support and
interaction with children suffers.
In the second study, published in the Journal of Neuroscience,
scientists at Northwestern University, in Illinois, connected lower
maternal education, a common symptom of poverty, to poor processing of
sound in the brains of children raised in lower-resource environments.
The researchers found that adolescents whose mothers had less education
were more likely to register more varied and noisier nerve responses
when hearing speech than those whose mothers had more schooling. That
response, according to previous work, could translate into poor reading
skills. The scientific team suspects that the lack of constant verbal
interaction between mother and child could be one factor in the noisier
brain responses to speech, since such back-and-forth can prime a
still-developing brain to isolate and recognize speech more efficiently.
Other data established that children in higher-income families are
exposed to 30 million more words than those in lower-income families
where parents have less education.
The good news, however, is that the effects may be reversible. Families
don’t chose poverty, but changes in caregiving, especially during early
childhood, could avoid some of the physical changes the scientists
measured. “By studying socioeconomic status within a neuroscientific
framework, we have the potential to expand our understanding of the
biological signatures of poverty,” said Nina Kraus, professor of
neurobiology, physiology and communication sciences at Northwestern
University and an author of the second study, in a statement. “And a
better understanding of how experiences shape the brain could inform
educational efforts aimed at closing the socioeconomic achievement gap.”
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