A call to leverage a health equity lens to accelerate human neuroscience research.

IF 2.6 3区 医学 Q2 BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES Frontiers in Integrative Neuroscience Pub Date : 2023-04-17 eCollection Date: 2023-01-01 DOI:10.3389/fnint.2023.1035597
Vida Rebello, Kristina A Uban
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Abstract

Investigation of health inequities tend to be examined, in human neurosciences, as biological factors at the level of the individual. In actuality, health inequities arise, due largely in part, to deep-seated structural factors. Structural inequality refers to the systemic disadvantage of one social group compared to others with whom they coexist. The term encompasses policy, law, governance, and culture and relates to race, ethnicity, gender or gender identity, class, sexual orientation, and other domains. These structural inequalities include but are not limited to social segregation, the intergenerational effects of colonialism and the consequent distribution of power and privilege. Principles to address inequities influenced by structural factors are increasingly prevalent in a subfield of the neurosciences, i.e., cultural neurosciences. Cultural neuroscience articulates the bidirectional relationship between biology and environmental contextual factors surrounding research participants. However, the operationalization of these principles may not have the intended spillover effect on the majority of human neurosciences: this limitation is the overarching focus of the present piece. Here, we provide our perspective that these principles are missing and very much needed in all human neuroscience subdisciplines to accelerate our understanding of the human brain. Furthermore, we provide an outline of two key tenets of a health equity lens necessary for achieving research equity in human neurosciences: the social determinants of health (SDoH) framework and how to deal with confounders using counterfactual thinking. We argue that these tenets should be prioritized across future human neuroscience research more generally, and doing so is a pathway to further gain an understanding of contextual background intertwined with the human brain, thus improving the rigor and inclusivity of human neuroscience research.

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呼吁利用健康公平视角加速人类神经科学研究。
在人类神经科学中,对健康不平等的调查往往是作为个人层面的生物因素来研究的。实际上,健康不平等的产生在很大程度上是由于根深蒂固的结构性因素。结构性不平等是指一个社会群体与其他共存群体相比所处的系统性劣势。这一术语包括政策、法律、治理和文化,涉及种族、民族、性别或性别认同、阶级、性取向和其他领域。这些结构性不平等包括但不限于社会隔离、殖民主义的代际影响以及随之而来的权力和特权分配。解决受结构性因素影响的不平等问题的原则在神经科学的一个分支领域,即文化神经科学中日益盛行。文化神经科学阐明了生物学与研究参与者周围环境背景因素之间的双向关系。然而,这些原则的可操作性可能不会对大多数人类神经科学产生预期的溢出效应:这一局限性正是本文的首要关注点。在此,我们提出自己的观点,即这些原则是所有人类神经科学分支学科所欠缺的,也是非常需要的,以加速我们对人脑的理解。此外,我们还概述了实现人类神经科学研究公平所必需的健康公平视角的两个关键原则:健康的社会决定因素(SDoH)框架以及如何利用反事实思维处理混杂因素。我们认为,未来的人类神经科学研究应更普遍地优先考虑这些原则,这样做是进一步了解与人类大脑交织在一起的背景的途径,从而提高人类神经科学研究的严谨性和包容性。
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来源期刊
Frontiers in Integrative Neuroscience
Frontiers in Integrative Neuroscience Neuroscience-Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience
CiteScore
4.60
自引率
2.90%
发文量
148
审稿时长
14 weeks
期刊介绍: Frontiers in Integrative Neuroscience publishes rigorously peer-reviewed research that synthesizes multiple facets of brain structure and function, to better understand how multiple diverse functions are integrated to produce complex behaviors. Led by an outstanding Editorial Board of international experts, this multidisciplinary open-access journal is at the forefront of disseminating and communicating scientific knowledge and impactful discoveries to researchers, academics, clinicians and the public worldwide. Our goal is to publish research related to furthering the understanding of the integrative mechanisms underlying brain functioning across one or more interacting levels of neural organization. In most real life experiences, sensory inputs from several modalities converge and interact in a manner that influences perception and actions generating purposeful and social behaviors. The journal is therefore focused on the primary questions of how multiple sensory, cognitive and emotional processes merge to produce coordinated complex behavior. It is questions such as this that cannot be answered at a single level – an ion channel, a neuron or a synapse – that we wish to focus on. In Frontiers in Integrative Neuroscience we welcome in vitro or in vivo investigations across the molecular, cellular, and systems and behavioral level. Research in any species and at any stage of development and aging that are focused at understanding integration mechanisms underlying emergent properties of the brain and behavior are welcome.
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