前额叶皮层对威胁的反应:9-10岁儿童的种族年龄差异。

Shervin Assari, Golnoush Akhlaghipour, Mohammed Saqib, Shanika Boyce, Mohsen Bazargan
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:大量研究表明,种族和年龄是大脑发育的两大决定因素,包括但不限于前额叶皮层(PFC)的发育。然而,少数族裔的收益递减(MDRs)表明,种族(作为种族主义的代表)可能与人类和大脑发育的各种决定因素相互作用。目的:利用一项基于任务的脑功能成像研究的数据,并将种族视为一种社会学而非生物学结构,我们研究了种族和年龄对前额叶皮质(PFC)对威胁的反应的综合影响。通过比较黑人和白人儿童,我们探索了年龄与前额叶皮质对威胁的反应之间的种族异质性:本研究使用了青少年大脑认知发展(ABCD)研究中基于任务的功能磁共振成像(fMRI)数据,该研究是一项针对美国 9-10 岁儿童的全国性、里程碑式的多中心大脑成像调查。主要结果是在以下感兴趣区(ROIs)测量PFC对威胁性与中性面孔对比反应的n-back运行的平均β权重:左半球-外侧眶额叶、左半球-上额叶、右半球-尾中额叶和右半球-上额叶皮层。自变量为年龄。协变量为性别、种族、家庭社会经济地位和邻里社会经济地位。种族是焦点调节因子。为了分析数据,我们使用了线性回归模型(不包含交互作用和社会经济地位作为协变量):我们纳入了 5,066 名 9-10 岁的儿童。相对于中性面孔,年龄和种族并不直接影响PFC对威胁性面孔的反应。当种族、性别和社会经济地位受到控制时,年龄和种族对相对于中性面孔的威胁性PFC反应显示出系统性的交互作用:结论:对于美国儿童来说,种族和年龄对PFC对威胁的反应没有直接影响,而是有乘法效应。这些结果可能反映了黑人和白人儿童在社会化和成长过程中的社会不平等。考虑到边缘系统在调节边缘系统对威胁的反应中的作用,这些结果非常重要。边缘系统和全脑功能区的协调工作是儿童行为和情感发展的核心要素。未来还需要研究社会分层和种族主义如何影响美国儿童的情绪处理和对威胁的调节。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Prefrontal Cortex Response to Threat: Race by Age Variation in 9-10 Year Old Children.

Background: Considerable research has suggested that race and age are two major determinants of brain development, including but not limited to development of the prefrontal cortex (PFC). Minorities' Diminished Returns (MDRs), however, suggests that race (as a proxy of racism) may interact with various determinants of human and brain development. Minimal knowledge, however, exists on whether age and race also interact on shaping PFC response to threat among American children.

Purpose: Using data from a task-based functional brain imaging study and considering race as a sociological rather than a biological construct, we investigated combined effects of race and age on prefrontal cortical (PFC) response to threat. We explored racial heterogeneities in the association between age and PFC response to threat by comparing Black and White children.

Methods: This study used the task-based functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) data from the Adolescents Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) study, a national, landmark, multi-center brain imaging investigation of 9-10 years old children in the US. The primary outcomes were mean beta weights of n-back runs measuring PFC response to threating versus neutral face contrast in the following regions of interest (ROIs): left hemisphere-lateral orbito-frontal, left hemisphere -superior-frontal, right hemisphere -caudal middle frontal, and right hemisphere -superior frontal cortex. The independent variable was age. Covariates were sex, ethnicity, family socioeconomic status, and neighborhood socioeconomic status. Race was the focal moderator. To analyze the data, we used linear regression models without and with interactions and SES as covariates.

Results: We included 5,066 9-10 years old children. Age and race did not show direct effects on PFC response to threatening relative to neutral faces. While ethnicity, sex, and socioeconomic status were controlled, age and race showed a systematic interaction on PFC response to threatening relative to neutral faces.

Conclusions: For American children, race and age do not have direct effects but multiplicative effects on PFC response to threat. The results may be reflective of social inequalities in how Black and White children are socialized and developed. The results are important given the role of the PFC in regulating the limbic system response to threat. Coordinated work of the limbic system and PFC is a core element of children's behavioral and emotional development. Future research is needed on how social stratification and racism shape emotion processing and regulation of American children in response to threat.

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