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Minds Under Siege: Cognitive Signatures of Poverty and Trauma in Refugee and Non-Refugee Adolescents
Authors:Alexandra Chen  Catherine Panter-Brick  Kristin Hadfield  Rana Dajani  Amar Hamoudi  Margaret Sheridan
Institution:1. Harvard University;2. Yale University;3. Queen Mary University of London;4. Hashemite University;5. University of Wisconsin–Madison;6. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Abstract:The impacts of war and displacement on executive function (EF)—what we might call the cognitive signatures of minds under siege—are little known. We surveyed a gender-balanced sample of 12- to 18-year-old Syrian refugees (n = 240) and Jordanian non-refugees (n = 210) living in Jordan. We examined the relative contributions of poverty, trauma exposure, posttraumatic stress, and insecurity to variance in inhibitory control and working memory. We observed associations between poverty and WM, suggesting that, even in populations exposed to substantial violence and fear, poverty is a specific pathway to WM deficit. We did not, however, find associations between EFs and exposures to trauma. Careful distinction between childhood adversities may illuminate which neurocognitive pathways matter for measures of cognitive function.
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