How Poverty Affects IQ

In a series of experiments, the researchers found that pressing financial concerns had an immediate impact on the ability of low-income individuals to perform on common cognitive and logic tests. On average, a person preoccupied with money problems exhibited a drop in cognitive function similar to a 13-point dip in IQ, or the loss of an entire night's sleep.

But when their concerns were benign, low-income individuals performed competently, at a similar level to people who were well off, said corresponding author Jiaying Zhao, who conducted the study as a doctoral student in the lab of co-author Eldar Shafir, Princeton's William Stewart Tod Professor of Psychology and Public Affairs. Zhao and Shafir worked with Anandi Mani, an associate professor of economics at the University of Warwick in Britain, and Sendhil Mullainathan, a Harvard University economics professor.

"These pressures create a salient concern in the mind and draw mental resources to the problem itself. That means we are unable to focus on other things in life that need our attention," said Zhao, who is now an assistant professor of psychology at the University of British Columbia.

"Previous views of poverty have blamed poverty on personal failings, or an environment that is not conducive to success," she said. "We're arguing that the lack of financial resources itself can lead to impaired cognitive function. The very condition of not having enough can actually be a cause of poverty."

The mental tax that poverty can put on the brain is distinct from stress, Shafir explained. Stress is a person's response to various outside pressures that — according to studies of arousal and performance — can actually enhance a person's functioning, he said. In the Science study, Shafir and his colleagues instead describe an immediate rather than chronic preoccupation with limited resources that can be a detriment to unrelated yet still important tasks.

Notes:

Fascinating for the fact that IQ appears so plastic in just day-to-day environment. Removing the stressors increases the IQ.

Folksonomies: cognition poverty

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Concepts:
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Mind (0.818078): dbpedia | freebase | opencyc
Psychology (0.778174): dbpedia | freebase | opencyc
University (0.658295): dbpedia | freebase | opencyc
Brain (0.648093): dbpedia | freebase | opencyc
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 Poor concentration: Poverty reduces brainpower needed for navigating other areas of life
Periodicals>Magazine Article:  Kelly, Morgan (August 29, 2013), Poor concentration: Poverty reduces brainpower needed for navigating other areas of life, News at Princeton, Retrieved on 2014-03-02
  • Source Material [www.princeton.edu]
  • Folksonomies: cognition poverty


    Schemas

    11 AUG 2011

     The Science of Social Welfare

    Social Welfare grew from a series of studies that determined children and babies who were malnourished or overly stressed suffered lifetimes of problems behaviorally and economically.
     11