City living and urban upbringing affect neural social stress processing in humans

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More than half of the world’s population now lives in cities, making the creation of a healthy urban environment a major policy priority. Cities have both health risks and benefits, but mental health is negatively affected: mood and anxiety disorders are more prevalent in city dwellers and the incidence of schizophrenia is strongly increased in people born and raised in cities. Although these findings have been widely attributed to the urban social environment, the neural processes that could mediate such associations are unknown. Here we show, using functional magnetic resonance imaging in three independent experiments, that urban upbringing and city living have dissociable impacts on social evaluative stress processing in humans.

http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v474/n7352/full/nature10190.html

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http://web.missouri.edu/~segerti/3830/CityLivingStress.pdf
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Publication Date: 
23/06/2011