Examining the relationship between psychosocial adversity and inhibitory control: A functional magnetic resonance imaging study of children growing up in extreme poverty

•Bangladeshi children raised in poverty underwent fMRI examining inhibitory control.•Psychosocial adversity was related to altered brain activation in children.•Brain activation patterns resemble compensatory and threat/deprivation models. Exposure to psychosocial adversity (PA) is associated with p...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of experimental child psychology 2025-01, Vol.249, p.106072, Article 106072
Hauptverfasser: Surani, Zoya, Turesky, Ted K., Sullivan, Eileen, Shama, Talat, Haque, Rashidul, Islam, Nazrul, Hafiz Kakon, Shahria, Yu, Xi, Petri, William A., Nelson, Charles, Gaab, Nadine
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Bangladeshi children raised in poverty underwent fMRI examining inhibitory control.•Psychosocial adversity was related to altered brain activation in children.•Brain activation patterns resemble compensatory and threat/deprivation models. Exposure to psychosocial adversity (PA) is associated with poor behavioral, physical, and mental health outcomes in adulthood. As these outcomes are related to alterations in developmental processes, growing evidence suggests that deficits in executive functions—inhibitory control in particular—may in part explain this relationship. However, literature examining the development of inhibitory control has been based on children in higher-resource environments, and little is known how low-resource settings might exacerbate the link between inhibitory control and health outcomes. In this context, we collected functional magnetic resonance imaging data during a Go/No-Go inhibitory control task and PA variables for 68 children aged 5 to 7 years living in Dhaka, Bangladesh, an area with a high prevalence of PA. The children’s mothers completed behavioral questionnaires to assess the children’s PA and their own PA. Whole-brain activation underlying inhibitory control was examined using the No-Go versus Go contrast, and associations with PA variables were assessed using whole-brain regressions. Childhood neglect was associated with weaker activation in the right posterior cingulate, whereas greater family conflict, economic stress, and maternal PA factors were associated with greater activation in the left medial frontal gyrus, right superior and middle frontal gyri, and left cingulate gyrus. These data suggest that neural networks supporting inhibitory control processes may vary as a function of exposure to different types of PA, particularly between those related to threat and deprivation. Furthermore, increased activation in children with greater PA may serve as a compensatory mechanism, allowing them to maintain similar behavioral task performance.
ISSN:0022-0965
1096-0457
1096-0457
DOI:10.1016/j.jecp.2024.106072