Abstract

The left-behind phenomenon, caused by parent out-migration, has become a common social issue and might lead to long-term and potential risks for children in rural areas of China. It is important to investigate the effect of social interaction on prefrontal activation of left-behind children in China because of possible effects of parent out-migration on children’s social cognition. We recruited 81 rural Chinese preschoolers aged 52–76 months (mean = 64.98 ± 6.321 months) preschoolers with three different statuses of parental out-migration (including non-, partially, and completely left-behind children). Using functional Near-Infrared Spectroscopy (fNIRS), we compared behavior and brain activation and in three groups (non-, partially-, completely-left-behind children) under two different social interaction conditions (child-teacher and child-stranger situation). Results revealed that initiating joint attention (IJA) may evoke higher brain activation than responding to joint attention (RJA) in the prefrontal cortex (PFC), especially in the case of initiating joint attention with the stranger. In addition, the activation of joint attention was positively correlated with children’s language score, cognitive flexibility, and facial expression recognition. More importantly, partially-left-behind children evoked higher brain activation in the IJA condition and presented a higher language level than completely/non-left-behind children. The current study provides insight into the neural basis of left-behind children’s development and revealed for the first time that family economic level and left-behind status may contribute to the lower social cognition.

Highlights

  • Parents’ migration to seek work opportunities is a main cause of parent-child separations

  • There was no statistical difference between the accuracy of Small or Big Pear Game (SBPG) and Facial Expression Recognition Task (FERT)

  • We found that the Peabody Picture Vocabulary TestRevised (PPVT) was associated with the accuracy of SBPG (r = 0.243, p = 0.029) and FERT (r = 0.410, p < 0.001), respectively

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Summary

Introduction

Parents’ migration to seek work opportunities is a main cause of parent-child separations. Due to long working hours, insufficient economic ability, and the limitation of the urban and rural household registration system, they have to leave their children behind in the rural home, which leads to the emergence of a special group of left-behind children in the process of largescale population mobility in China. We classified children into three categories, completely-left-behind children (meaning that both parents leave for cities and the children are left behind to live with a grandparent, relative, or family friend), partially-left-behind children (who stay with one parent in the rural village while another parent-often the father-leaves for work in the urban area), and non-left-behind children (who remain in the rural village with both parents) [6, 7]

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