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Deficit in 'poor' brains identified

10 December 2008

BRAIN differences seem to separate rich and poor children. The discovery could guide ways to improve cognition in deprived, underperforming children.

Children in higher-income families, with more-educated parents, are known to outperform their less-privileged peers in intelligence tests and academic results, perhaps because they have access to more books and educational toys and tend to be exposed to less stress.

To discover the neural basis for the differences, Mark Kishiyama at the University of California, Berkeley, and colleagues tracked brain activity in 7 to 13-year-olds while they performed an undemanding shape-recognition task. Almost all performed well, but those from…

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