Family income is not significantly associated with T1w/T2w ratio in the Human Connectome Project in Development

David G. Weissman, Graham L. Baum, Ashley Sanders, Maya L. Rosen, Deanna M. Barch, Katie A. McLaughlin, Leah H. Somerville
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Abstract

Abstract Growing evidence indicates that brain development varies as a function of family socioeconomic status (SES). Numerous studies have demonstrated that children from low-SES backgrounds have thinner cortex than children from higher-SES backgrounds. A recent study in a large developmental sample found widespread associations between lower SES and greater cortical T1w/T2w ratio—thought to be an indirect proxy for cortical myelin. We evaluated the association of family income with cortical T1w/T2w ratio as a function of age in the Human Connectome Project in Development sample of 989 youth aged 8-21 years. We observed no associations between family income and T1w/T2w ratio that were significant after corrections for multiple comparisons at the region, network, or whole-brain level. Region of practical equivalence (ROPE) analyses were also consistent with the absence of an association between family income and T1w/T2w ratio. We discuss potential methodological sources of inconsistency between this and the previous study examining the same question. While the question of whether family income may influence cortical myelin development remains, these null results may indicate that the association between SES and cortical myelin development may not be as strong as with other aspects of brain structure.
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在人类连接组发展项目中,家庭收入与T1w/T2w比率没有显著关联
越来越多的证据表明,大脑发育是家庭社会经济地位(SES)的一个函数。大量研究表明,社会经济地位低的孩子的大脑皮层比社会经济地位高的孩子薄。最近一项对大型发育样本的研究发现,较低的社会经济地位与较高的皮质T1w/T2w比率之间存在广泛的关联,该比率被认为是皮质髓磷脂的间接代表。我们评估了家庭收入与皮质T1w/T2w比率的关系,并将其作为年龄的函数,在人类连接组发展项目样本中选取了989名8-21岁的青年。在对区域、网络或全脑水平的多重比较进行校正后,我们观察到家庭收入与T1w/T2w比率之间没有显著的关联。实际等效区域(ROPE)分析也与家庭收入与T1w/T2w比率之间缺乏关联一致。我们讨论了这一研究与之前研究相同问题之间不一致的潜在方法来源。虽然家庭收入是否会影响皮质髓磷脂发育的问题仍然存在,但这些无效结果可能表明,经济地位与皮质髓磷脂发育之间的关联可能不如与大脑结构其他方面的关联那么强。
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