Neuroscience and social deprivation

by generaldecay | April 13, 2009 at 08:31 am
79 views | 12 Recommendations | 1 comment
THAT the children of the poor underachieve in later life, and thus remain poor themselves, is one of the enduring problems of society. Sociologists have studied and described it. Socialists have tried to abolish it by dictatorship and central planning. Liberals have preferred democracy and opportunity. But nobody has truly understood what causes it. Until, perhaps, now.

Interesting. It's becoming clearer why children from poorer backgrounds or lower socio-economic environments are less likely to achieve success later on in life than their more fortunate counterparts.

One difference between these individuals may lie in the capacities of working memories which is affected by stress.

The crucial breakthrough was made three years ago, when Martha Farah of the University of Pennsylvania showed that the working memories of children who have been raised in poverty have smaller capacities than those of middle-class children. Working memory is the ability to hold bits of information in the brain for current use—the digits of a phone number, for example. It is crucial for comprehending languages, for reading and for solving problems. Entry into the working memory is also a prerequisite for something to be learnt permanently as part of declarative memory—the stuff a person knows explicitly, like the dates of famous battles, rather than what he knows implicitly, like how to ride a bicycle.

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Sir Michael Marmot, of University College London, and his intellectual successors have shown repeatedly that people at the bottom of social hierarchies experience much more stress in their daily lives than those at the top—and suffer the consequences in their health. Even quite young children are socially sensitive beings and aware of such things.

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Roy C

I grew up in a working-class neighborhood and my father was one of the few college graduates.

Parents in my neighborhood were exactly as I read about them in developmental psych class years later: they didn't explain things to their kids.

When you add that with the lack of vocabulary in dinner table conversation and elsewhere, you can account for the effects described here.

Actually, memory was better in African-American kids in Washington, DC where some of the fist attempts to measure IQ were done.

But the first IQ tests rejected memory as IQ because the black kids did better than the white kids.

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Rhonda J Mangus
First Flagged at 8:43 AM, Apr 13, 2009 by Rhonda J Mangus

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