10 research outputs found

    Childhood Socioeconomic Status and Executive Function in Childhood and Beyond

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    Socioeconomic status (SES) predicts health, wellbeing, and cognitive ability, including executive function (EF). A body of recent work has shown that childhood SES is positively related to EF, but it is not known whether this disparity grows, diminishes or holds steady over development, from childhood through adulthood. We examined the association between childhood SES and EF in a sample ranging from 9–25 years of age, with six canonical EF tasks. Analyzing all of the tasks together and in functionally defined groups, we found positive relations between SES and EF, and the relations did not vary by age. Analyzing the tasks separately, SES was positively associated with performance in some but not all EF measures, depending on the covariates used, again without varying by age. These results add to a growing body of evidence that childhood SES is associated with EF abilities, and contribute novel evidence concerning the persistence of this association into early adulthood

    At risk of being risky: The relationship between "brain age" under emotional states and risk preference.

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    Developmental differences regarding decision making are often reported in the absence of emotional stimuli and without context, failing to explain why some individuals are more likely to have a greater inclination toward risk. The current study (N=212; 10-25y) examined the influence of emotional context on underlying functional brain connectivity over development and its impact on risk preference. Using functional imaging data in a neutral brain-state we first identify the "brain age" of a given individual then validate it with an independent measure of cortical thickness. We then show, on average, that "brain age" across the group during the teen years has the propensity to look younger in emotional contexts. Further, we show this phenotype (i.e. a younger brain age in emotional contexts) relates to a group mean difference in risk perception - a pattern exemplified greatest in young-adults (ages 18-21). The results are suggestive of a specified functional brain phenotype that relates to being at "risk to be risky.

    Social Violations of Expectations and Peer Influence in Adolescents

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    A violation of expectations produces a prediction error, a learning signal by which organisms update current understanding and knowledge of expectations. The primary neural locus implicated in violations of expectations is the ventral striatum (VS), which undergoes significant development during adolescence, a period marked by sensitivity and responsivity to social feedback and reward. The VS demonstrates increased activation for reward and reward prediction errors in this age group compared to other age groups. Importantly, the VS is also recruited when adolescents take risks and are in the presence of their peers. While a few studies have examined social violations of expectations in adults, to our knowledge, none have examined social violations of expectations in adolescents. The goal of this dissertation was to implement novel, ecologically valid designs to determine whether neural responses to realistic social feedback from a friend was associated with a common risky behavior, substance use, in adolescents. We found that adolescents recruited the VS for positive social violations of expectations compared to negative violations of expectations, and were happiest when their social expectations were met (compared to positive or negative violations). We found that adolescents who recruited the VS more for violations of expectations reported greater substance use, while adolescents who recruited the VS less for violations of expectations reported lesser substance use, increased susceptibility to peer influence, and were more susceptible to peer influence in an experimental manipulation. Taken together, this body of work suggests adolescents who are more attuned to social cues from peers (and are likely to modify their behaviors in response) require smaller expectancy violations to experience reward; while those who engage in increased social risk taking require greater expectancy violations by comparison to experience reward. Implications of this work are discussed with regard to determining which adolescents are most likely to take greater social (substance use) risks, based on their VS response to social violations of expectations

    Neural correlates of social feedback from friends and self-reported happiness in adolescence

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    The Impact of Emotional States on Cognitive Control Circuitry and Function

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    Typically in the laboratory, cognitive and emotional processes are studied separately or as a stream of fleeting emotional stimuli embedded within a cognitive task. Yet in life, thoughts and actions often occur in more lasting emotional states of arousal. The current study examines the impact of emotions on actions using a novel behavioral paradigm and functional neuroimaging to assess cognitive control under sustained states of threat (anticipation of an aversive noise) and excitement (anticipation of winning money). Thirty-eight healthy adult participants were scanned while performing an emotional go/no-go task with positive (happy faces), negative (fearful faces), and neutral (calm faces) emotional cues, under threat or excitement. Cognitive control performance was enhanced during the excited state relative to a nonarousing control condition. This enhanced performance was paralleled by heightened activity of frontoparietal and frontostriatal circuitry. In contrast, under persistent threat, cognitive control was diminished when the valence of the emotional cue conflicted with the emotional state. Successful task performance in this conflicting emotional condition was associated with increased activity in the posterior cingulate cortex, a default mode network region implicated in complex processes such as processing emotions in the context of self and monitoring performance. This region showed positive coupling with frontoparietal circuitry implicated in cognitive control, providing support for a role of the posterior cingulate cortex in mobilizing cognitive resources to improve performance. These findings suggest that emotional states of arousal differentially modulate cognitive control and point to the potential utility of this paradigm for understanding effects of situational and pathological states of arousal on behavior

    When Is an Adolescent an Adult? Assessing Cognitive Control in Emotional and Nonemotional Contexts

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    An individual is typically considered an adult at age 18, although the age of adulthood varies for different legal and social policies. A key question is how cognitive capacities relevant to these policies change with development. The current study used an emotional go/no-go paradigm and functional neuroimaging to assess cognitive control under sustained states of negative and positive arousal in a community sample of one hundred ten 13- to 25-year-olds from New York City and Los Angeles. The results showed diminished cognitive performance under brief and prolonged negative emotional arousal in 18- to 21-year-olds relative to adults over 21. This reduction in performance was paralleled by decreased activity in fronto-parietal circuitry, implicated in cognitive control, and increased sustained activity in the ventromedial prefrontal cortex, involved in emotional processes. The findings suggest a developmental shift in cognitive capacity in emotional situations that coincides with dynamic changes in prefrontal circuitry. These findings may inform age-related social policies

    Around the world, adolescence is a time of heightened sensation seeking and immature self-regulation

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    The dual systems model of adolescent risk-taking portrays the period as one characterized by a combination of heightened sensation seeking and still-maturing self-regulation, but most tests of this model have been conducted in the United States or Western Europe. In the present study, these propositions are tested in an international sample of more than 5000 individuals between ages 10 and 30 years from 11 countries in Africa, Asia, Europe and the Americas, using a multi-method test battery that includes both self-report and performance-based measures of both constructs. Consistent with the dual systems model, sensation seeking increased between preadolescence and late adolescence, peaked at age 19, and declined thereafter, whereas self-regulation increased steadily from preadolescence into young adulthood, reaching a plateau between ages 23 and 26. Although there were some variations in the magnitude of the observed age trends, the developmental patterns were largely similar across countries
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