Exposure to community violence as a mechanism linking neighborhood socioeconomic disadvantage and neural responses to reward

Westerman, H. B., Suarez, G. L., Richmond-Rakerd, L. S., Nusslock, R., Klump, K. L., Burt, S. A., & Hyde, L. W. (2024). Exposure to community violence as a mechanism linking neighborhood socioeconomic disadvantage and neural responses to reward. Social cognitive and affective neuroscience, 19(1), nsae029. https://doi.org/10.1093/scan/nsae029

Abstract

A growing literature links socioeconomic disadvantage and adversity to brain function, including disruptions in reward processing. Less research has examined exposure to community violence (ECV) as a specific adversity related to differences in reward-related brain activation, despite the prevalence of community violence exposure for those living in disadvantaged contexts. The current study tested whether ECV was associated with reward-related ventral striatum (VS) activation after accounting for familial factors associated with differences in reward-related activation (e.g. parenting and family income). Moreover, we tested whether ECV is a mechanism linking socioeconomic disadvantage to reward-related activation in the VS. We utilized data from 444 adolescent twins sampled from birth records and residing in neighborhoods with above-average levels of poverty. ECV was associated with greater reward-related VS activation, and the association remained after accounting for family-level markers of disadvantage. We identified an indirect pathway in which socioeconomic disadvantage predicted greater reward-related activation via greater ECV, over and above family-level adversity. These findings highlight the unique impact of community violence exposure on reward processing and provide a mechanism through which socioeconomic disadvantage may shape brain function.

Keywords: brain; community violence; developmental neuroscience; neuroimaging; poverty; reward