Socioeconomic and cognitive roots of trait anxiety in young adults

Author:

Cermakova Pavla12ORCID,Chlapečka Adam34,Andrýsková Lenka5,Brázdil Milan6,Marečková Klára16

Affiliation:

1. Second Faculty of Medicine, Charles University Prague, Prague 5, 150 06, Czech Republic

2. National Institute of Mental Health, Klecany 250 67, Czech Republlic

3. Third Faculty of Medicine, Charles University Prague, Prague 10, 100 00, Czech Republic

4. Centre of Clinical Neuroscience, Department of Neurology, First Faculty of Medicine, General University Hospital, Charles University in Prague, Prague 2, 128 21, Czech Republic

5. RECETOX, Faculty of Science, Masaryk University, Brno 625 00, Czech Republic

6. Brain and Mind Research, Central European Institute of Technology, Masaryk University, Brno 625 00, Czech Republic

Abstract

Abstract In 54 participants (41% women) from the Czech arm of the European Longitudinal Study of Pregnancy and Childhood, a national birth cohort with prospectively collected data from their birth until young adulthood, we aimed to study the association between early-life socioeconomic deprivation (ELSD), cognitive ability in adolescence, trait anxiety and resting state functional connectivity of the lateral prefrontal cortex (LPFC) in young adulthood. We found that ELSD was associated with lower cognitive ability in adolescence (at age 13) as well as higher trait anxiety in young adulthood (at age 23/24). Higher cognitive ability in adolescence predicted lower trait anxiety in young adulthood. Resting state functional connectivity between the right LPFC and a cluster of voxels including left precentral gyrus, left postcentral gyrus and superior frontal gyrus mediated the relationship between lower cognitive ability in adolescence and higher trait anxiety in young adulthood. These findings indicate that lower cognitive ability and higher trait anxiety may be both consequences of socioeconomic deprivation in early life. The recruitment of the right LPFC may be the underlying mechanism, through which higher cognitive ability may ameliorate trait anxiety.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cognitive Neuroscience,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology,General Medicine

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