心理学
精神病理学
焦虑
纵向研究
忽视
发展心理学
萧条(经济学)
不稳定性
幼儿
心理健康
人口
临床心理学
精神科
医学
环境卫生
物理
病理
机械
经济
宏观经济学
作者
Felicia A. Hardi,Leigh G. Goetschius,Scott Tillem,Vonnie C. McLoyd,Jeanne Brooks‐Gunn,Montana Boone,Nestor L. Lopez‐Duran,Colter Mitchell,Luke W. Hyde,Christopher S. Monk
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.dcn.2023.101253
摘要
Unstable and unpredictable environments are linked to risk for psychopathology, but the underlying neural mechanisms that explain how instability relate to subsequent mental health concerns remain unclear. In particular, few studies have focused on the association between instability and white matter structures despite white matter playing a crucial role for neural development. In a longitudinal sample recruited from a population-based study (N = 237), household instability (residential moves, changes in household composition, caregiver transitions in the first 5 years) was examined in association with adolescent structural network organization (network integration, segregation, and robustness of white matter connectomes; Mage = 15.87) and young adulthood anxiety and depression (six years later). Results indicate that greater instability related to greater global network efficiency, and this association remained after accounting for other types of adversity (e.g., harsh parenting, neglect, food insecurity). Moreover, instability predicted increased depressive symptoms via increased network efficiency even after controlling for previous levels of symptoms. Exploratory analyses showed that structural connectivity involving the left fronto-lateral and temporal regions were most strongly related to instability. Findings suggest that structural network efficiency relating to household instability may be a neural mechanism of risk for later depression and highlight the ways in which instability modulates neural development.
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