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Global urbanicity is associated with brain and behaviour in young people.

Jiayuan XuXiaoxuan LiuQiaojun LiRan GoldblattWen QinFeng LiuCongying ChuQiang LuoAlex IngLining GuoNana LiuHuaigui LiuConghong HuangJingliang ChengMeiyun WangZuojun GengWenzhen ZhuBing ZhangWeihua LiaoShijun QiuHui ZhangXiao-Jun XuYongqiang YuBo GaoTong HanGuangbin CuiFeng ChenJunfang XianJiance LiJing ZhangXi-Nian ZuoDawei WangWen ShenYanwei MiaoFei YuanSu LuiXiaochu ZhangKai XuLong Jiang ZhangZhaoxiang YeTobias BanaschewskiGareth J BarkerArun L W BokdeHerta FlorAntoine GrigisHugh GaravanPenny A GowlandAndreas HeinzRüdiger BrühlJean-Luc MartinotEric ArtigesFrauke NeesDimitri Papadopoulos OrfanosHerve LemaitreTomáš PausLuise PoustkaLauren RobinsonSarah HohmannJuliane Hilde FröhnerMichael N SmolkaHenrik WalterRobert WhelanJeanne WintererKevin PatrickVince D CalhounMulin Jun LiMeng LiangPeng GongEdward D BarkerNicholas ClintonAndre MarquandLe YuChunshui YuGunter Schumannnull nullnull null
Published in: Nature human behaviour (2021)
Urbanicity is a growing environmental challenge for mental health. Here, we investigate correlations of urbanicity with brain structure and function, neuropsychology and mental illness symptoms in young people from China and Europe (total n = 3,867). We developed a remote-sensing satellite measure (UrbanSat) to quantify population density at any point on Earth. UrbanSat estimates of urbanicity were correlated with brain volume, cortical surface area and brain network connectivity in the medial prefrontal cortex and cerebellum. UrbanSat was also associated with perspective-taking and depression symptoms, and this was mediated by neural variables. Urbanicity effects were greatest when urban exposure occurred in childhood for the cerebellum, and from childhood to adolescence for the prefrontal cortex. As UrbanSat can be generalized to different geographies, it may enable assessments of correlations of urbanicity with mental illness and resilience globally.
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