Home language and literacy environment and its relationship to socioeconomic status and white matter structure in infancy.
Ted K TureskyJoseph SanfilippoJennifer ZukBanu AhtamBorjan GagoskiAlly LeeKathryn GarrisiJade DunstanClarisa CarruthersJolijn VanderauweraXi YuNadine GaabPublished in: Brain structure & function (2022)
The home language and literacy environment (HLLE) in infancy has been associated with subsequent pre-literacy skill development and HLLE at preschool-age has been shown to correlate with white matter organization in tracts that subserve pre-reading and reading skills. Furthermore, childhood socioeconomic status (SES) has been linked with both HLLE and white matter organization. It is important to understand whether the relationships between environmental factors such as HLLE and SES and white matter organization can be detected as early as infancy, as this period is characterized by rapid brain development that may make white matter pathways particularly susceptible to these early experiences. Here, we hypothesized that HLLE (1) relates to white matter organization in pre-reading and reading-related tracts in infants, and (2) mediates a link between SES and white matter organization. To test these hypotheses, infants (mean age: 8.6 ± 2.3 months, N = 38) underwent diffusion-weighted imaging MRI during natural sleep. Image processing was performed with an infant-specific pipeline and fractional anisotropy (FA) was estimated from the arcuate fasciculus (AF) and superior longitudinal fasciculus (SLF) bilaterally using the baby automated fiber quantification method. HLLE was measured with the Reading subscale of the StimQ (StimQ-Reading) and SES was measured with years of maternal education. Self-reported maternal reading ability was also quantified and applied to our statistical models as a proxy for confounding genetic effects. StimQ-Reading positively correlated with FA in left AF and to maternal education, but did not mediate the relationship between them. Taken together, these findings underscore the importance of considering HLLE from the start of life and may inform novel prevention and intervention strategies to support developing infants during a period of heightened brain plasticity.
Keyphrases
- white matter
- working memory
- multiple sclerosis
- healthcare
- diffusion weighted imaging
- deep learning
- birth weight
- weight gain
- magnetic resonance imaging
- randomized controlled trial
- contrast enhanced
- health information
- autism spectrum disorder
- physical activity
- atrial fibrillation
- machine learning
- pregnancy outcomes
- gene expression
- dna methylation
- pregnant women
- magnetic resonance
- genome wide
- body mass index
- cross sectional
- young adults
- childhood cancer
- social media
- medical students
- sleep quality
- early life
- loop mediated isothermal amplification