Abstract

While race/ethnicity and socioeconomic status (SES) impact brain structures such as the amygdala, less is known on whether or not family SES partially explains why amygdala volume is smaller for racial and ethnic minority groups. This study tested the mediating effects of family SES on racial and ethnic differences in right and left amygdala volume. We borrowed the structural Magnetic Resonance Imaging (sMRI) data of the Children Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) study, a brain imaging investigation of childhood brain development in the US. The total sample was 8977, 9-10-year-old children. The independent variables were race and ethnicity. The primary outcomes were right and left amygdala volume. Age, sex, household size, and marital status were the covariates. Multiple SES indicators such as family income, subjective family SES, parental employment, parental education, and neighborhood income were the mediators. To analyze the data, we used regression models without and with our mediators. Sobel test was used to test if these mediational paths are statistically significant. Black and Latino children had smaller amygdala sizes than non-Latino White children. The effects of race and ethnicity on amygdala volume were partially mediated by SES indicators, suggesting that one of the many reasons Black and Latino children have smaller volumes of right and left amygdala is their lower SES. For American children, lower family and neighborhood SES indicators partially, but not fully, explain smaller amygdala sizes of Black and Latino children compared to non- Latino White children.

Highlights

  • While race/ethnicity and socioeconomic status (SES) impact brain structures such as the amygdala, less is known on whether or not family SES partially explains why amygdala volume is smaller for racial and ethnic minority groups

  • The right amygdala volume was larger for White (1638.02 ±230.00) than for Black (1536.78 ±220.22) children (p < 0.001)

  • Left amygdala volume was larger for White (1601.05 ±232.77) than for Black (1482.71 ±213.29) children (p < 0.001)

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Summary

Introduction

While race/ethnicity and socioeconomic status (SES) impact brain structures such as the amygdala, less is known on whether or not family SES partially explains why amygdala volume is smaller for racial and ethnic minority groups. Racial and ethnic minority and low SES children are at an increased risk of dropping out of school (Sirin, 2005), depression (Mendelson, Kubzansky, Datta, & Buka, 2008), suicide (Eisenberg, Gollust, Golberstein, & Hefner, 2007; Yildiz, Demirhan, & Gurbuz, 2019), antisocial behaviors (Palma-Coca et al, 2011), aggression (Heshmat et al, 2016), and use of tobacco (Barreto, de Figueiredo, & Giatti, 2013; Kaleta, Usidame, Dziankowska-Zaborszczyk, & Makowiec-Dabrowska, 2015), alcohol (Moore & Littlecott, 2015; Silveira et al, 2014), and drugs (Gerra et al, 2020) Both racial and ethnic minority status and low SES correlate with brain function and structures within (Oshri et al, 2019) and across (Javanbakht et al, 2015) regions. Our study tested the mediating effect of family SES on the association between race/ethnicity and the amygdala volume to extend the existing knowledge on social and economic mechanisms that link race/ethnicity to children’s brain structure

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