[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Mail]  [Sign-in]  [Setup]  [Help]  [Register] 

Joe Rogan Experience #2138 - Tucker Carlson

Police Dispersing Student Protesters at USC - Breaking News Coverage (College Protests)

What Passover Means For The New Testament Believer

Are We Closer Than Ever To The Next Pandemic?

War in Ukraine Turns on Russia

what happened during total solar eclipse

Israel Attacks Iran, Report Says - LIVE Breaking News Coverage

Earth is Scorched with Heat

Antiwar Activists Chant ‘Death to America’ at Event Featuring Chicago Alderman

Vibe Shift

A stream that makes the pleasant Rain sound.

Older Men - Keep One Foot In The Dark Ages

When You Really Want to Meet the Diversity Requirements

CERN to test world's most powerful particle accelerator during April's solar eclipse

Utopian Visionaries Who Won’t Leave People Alone

No - no - no Ain'T going To get away with iT

Pete Buttplug's Butt Plugger Trying to Turn Kids into Faggots

Mark Levin: I'm sick and tired of these attacks

Questioning the Big Bang

James Webb Data Contradicts the Big Bang

Pssst! Don't tell the creationists, but scientists don't have a clue how life began

A fine romance: how humans and chimps just couldn't let go

Early humans had sex with chimps

O’Keefe dons bulletproof vest to extract undercover journalist from NGO camp.

Biblical Contradictions (Alleged)

Catholic Church Praising Lucifer

Raising the Knife

One Of The HARDEST Videos I Had To Make..

Houthi rebels' attack severely damages a Belize-flagged ship in key strait leading to the Red Sea (British Ship)

Chinese Illegal Alien. I'm here for the moneuy

Red Tides Plague Gulf Beaches

Tucker Carlson calls out Nikki Haley, Ben Shapiro, and every other person calling for war:

{Are there 7 Deadly Sins?} I’ve heard people refer to the “7 Deadly Sins,” but I haven’t been able to find that sort of list in Scripture.

Abomination of Desolation | THEORY, BIBLE STUDY

Bible Help

Libertysflame Database Updated

Crush EVERYONE with the Alien Gambit!

Vladimir Putin tells Tucker Carlson US should stop arming Ukraine to end war

Putin hints Moscow and Washington in back-channel talks in revealing Tucker Carlson interview

Trump accuses Fulton County DA Fani Willis of lying in court response to Roman's motion

Mandatory anti-white racism at Disney.

Iceland Volcano Erupts For Third Time In 2 Months, State Of Emergency Declared

Tucker Carlson Interview with Vladamir Putin

How will Ar Mageddon / WW III End?

What on EARTH is going on in Acts 16:11? New Discovery!

2023 Hottest in over 120 Million Years

2024 and beyond in prophecy

Questions

This Speech Just Broke the Internet

This AMAZING Math Formula Will Teach You About God!


Status: Not Logged In; Sign In

Science-Technology
See other Science-Technology Articles

Title: Study: Poor children have smaller brains than wealthy peers
Source: Yahoo Finance
URL Source: http://finance.yahoo.com/news/study ... n-wealthy-peers-204438119.html
Published: Apr 28, 2015
Author: Mandi Woodruff
Post Date: 2015-04-28 16:58:02 by Hondo68
Keywords: neocortex is thinner, less than $25,000 annually, 6% smaller in surface area
Views: 2129
Comments: 5

Kids on a laptop

Thinkstock

New research shows that low-income kids may be lagging behind their peers because a crucial part of their brains is underdeveloped.

Researchers from MIT’s McGovern Institute for Brain Research compared the brains of affluent 12- and 13-year-olds to the brains of less affluent peers. They found that one particular area of the brain — the neocortex, which plays a key role in memory and learning ability — is thinner in children from lower-income households.

This is an important part of the brain for young students, who are often tested based on their ability to recall large chunks of information. Children who had a thinner neocortex performed poorly on standardized tests, researchers found.  

More than 90% of high-income students scored above average on a statewide math and English/Language Arts standardized test, compared to less than 60% of low-income students. Differences in cortical thickness could account for almost half of the income-achievement gap in this sample, researchers wrote, mostly because the neocortex plays such a crucial role in performance on math and language arts exams.

“Just as you would expect, there’s a real cost to not living in a supportive environment. We can see it not only in test scores, in educational attainment, but within the brains of these children,” says psychological scientist John Gabrieli, a professor of brain and cognitive sciences at MIT and one of the study’s authors.

Differences in how children succeed academically have long been studied, but mostly through the lens of racial impact. Since a 2011 study published by Stanford University professor Sean Reardon found that the gap between standardized test scores of affluent and low-income students has grown by about 40% since the 1960s, there’s been a lot more research aimed at finding links between income and achievement, rather than race alone. The MIT study found low-income children were equally likely to have a thinner neocortex, no matter their race.

View photo.

Source: Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Source: Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Gabrieli and his co-authors can’t say exactly why poor children’s brains develop differently because there are too many possibilities to count. Everything from nutrition, health care, early education, stress levels, and quality of schools can impact a child’s learning ability and brain development.

Their findings do, however, underline the importance of early intervention to ensure that low-income kids get the tools they need to succeed.  

“We know a lot from research and with certainty that the brain is highly plastic at all ages,” he says. “This is all the more reason to promote things in schools and within communities that will nurture these brains. And maybe [brain scans] can give you some way to monitor whether programs that are meant to support children are making those differences rather than waiting many years for those outcomes.”

The MIT study comes a few weeks after a similar one by Stanford University researchers found that children from low-income backgrounds tend to have smaller brains, overall, than their wealthier peers. The brain of a child whose family earns less than $25,000 annually is 6% smaller in surface area than a child whose parents earned more than $150,000, according to the study, published in Nature Neuroscience.

The MIT study, “Neuroanatomical Correlates of the Income-Achievement Gap,” is published in the Association for Psychological Science.


Poster Comment:

The scientific explanation for why Hillary and Rafael Cruz are pea-brains. (2 images)

Post Comment   Private Reply   Ignore Thread  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest

#1. To: hondo68 (#0)

"The MIT study comes a few weeks after a similar one by Stanford University researchers found that children from low-income backgrounds tend to have smaller brains, overall, than their wealthier peers."

Children from low-income backgrounds tend to have smaller brains because their parents have smaller brains. That's why they're low income.

An IQ of 100 is the mean. For every 10,000 people with an IQ of 90, there are 10,000 people with an IQ of 110.

That's simply a fact of life. No matter what you do with these kids or what you don't do, an IQ of 100 will still be the mean, and for every 10,000 people with an IQ of 90, there will still be 10,000 people with an IQ of 110.

Same thing with "poverty". No matter what we do, there are still people in poverty. Gosh. We spent trillions of dollars on the War on Poverty and we still have poverty.

misterwhite  posted on  2015-04-28   17:38:51 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: misterwhite (#1)

We spent trillions of dollars on the War on Poverty and we still have poverty.

Trillions!  Must be a very profitable plantation.



"[Charles] Manson scored 109 on one prison I.Q. test, when he was 16, and 121 on another a few years later [in prison]. The first result is slightly above average; the second is said to be in the “high normal” range."

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/08/18/books/review/manson-a-biography-by-jeff-guinn.html


Ooops.   How'd that happen - did Charlie's brain get bigger?

VxH  posted on  2015-04-29   9:51:09 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: VxH (#2)

"Ooops. How'd that happen"

One of life's mysteries that I couldn't care less about.

misterwhite  posted on  2015-04-29   10:14:02 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: hondo68 (#0)

I always thought that I should take "Fat-Head" as a compliment.
I was correct. LOL!

Chuck_Wagon  posted on  2015-04-29   15:21:07 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#5. To: misterwhite (#3)

Is your brain smaller than Charlie's or about the same size?

VxH  posted on  2015-04-29   22:45:45 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest

[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Mail]  [Sign-in]  [Setup]  [Help]  [Register] 

Please report web page problems, questions and comments to webmaster@libertysflame.com