Children living in low-income households who endure family instability and emotionally distant caregivers are at risk of having
impaired1 cognitive2 abilities according to new research from the University of Rochester. The study of 201 low-income mother-child pairs, conducted at Mount Hope Family Center, tracked the levels of the stress
hormone3, cortisol, in the children at ages 2, 3, and 4. It found that specific forms of family adversity are linked to both elevated and low levels of cortisol in children. Children with either the elevated or low cortisol levels also had lower than average cognitive ability at age 4.
"What we were interested in seeing is whether specific risk factors of children living in poverty might be related to children's cortisol levels," said lead author Jennifer Suor, a PhD candidate in clinical
psychology4. "Then we looked to see if the hormone levels are predictive of significant differences in the children's ability to think."
The study, published in the journal Child Development, shows that children in low-income, stressful home environments--specifically homes with family instability and harsh and disengaged mothers--can have
adverse5 levels of cortisol in their bodies, which
previously6 studies have associated with having damaging affects on the structure and function of children's brains.
Understanding how cortisol affects the brain's cognitive abilities, though, is still unclear. "The exact
mechanisms7 through which too much or too little cortisol affects cognitive functioning aren't
fully8 understood," said coauthor Melissa L. Sturge-Apple, assistant professor of psychology.
illustration of three people showing low and high cortisol level related to low cognitive function and moderate cortisol levels related to average cognitive function "Researchers hypothesize that too much cortisol can have
toxic9 effects on parts of the brain that are important for cognitive functioning, and too little might hinder the body's ability to recruit the biological resources necessary for
optimal10 cognitive functioning," Sturge-Apple said.
"Moderate amounts of cortisol is a good thing, though, it helps facilitate cognitive functioning," added Suor. "In the right amount it makes you rise to the occasion and it helps recruit important cognitive resources like memory and the ability to reason. But it's a problem when we have too much or too little cortisol."