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Ethnic identity refers to how individuals perceive and experience themselves in the context of social groups, racial background, or culture (Phinney & Ong., 2007). Ethnic identity is positively associated with psychological well-being (Rivas-Drake et al., 2014) and negatively associated with depression and anxiety (Forstmeier et al., 2021). Those with strong ethnic identity may display resiliency to the negative effects of discrimination on psychological well-being (Urzúa et al., 2021). Phinney's model describes four profiles for how people put effort into, participate in, and reflect upon their ethnic identity (Phinney, 1989). Despite prior work addressing ethnic identity and psychosocial outcomes (for review, see Meca et al., 2023), few studies have considered its neurobiological underpinnings. In the current study, we identified profiles of ethnic identity among participants in The Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development Study (ABCD Study) using latent profile analysis. Next, we examined resting state functional connectivity differences across observed profiles and assessed the moderating effects of perceived discrimination. Results indicated heightened cingulo-parietal (CPAR) network connectivity among adolescents with highly diffuse ethnic identities; among moderately achieved ethnic identities, perceived discrimination moderated the association between ethnic identity and CPAR connectivity. We discuss how these findings may be related to attentional shift, error monitoring, autobiographical memory, and social judgements.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2025.08.24.671805 | DOI Listing |
In this paper, we will present an analysis of three terms central to contemporary cultural critique: age, gender and migration, bringing them together in an approach we call "triangulation". We draw on Katy Gardner's ethnographic study of Bangladeshi migrants to London, Age, Narrative and Migration (2002), which addresses the three terms, to examine the interrelated identity constructions that are at stake in triangulation. In a second step, we analyze Monica Ali's novel Brick Lane (2003) as a pertinent literary example, in which aspects of age, gender, and migration come together in ways that may further illuminate and develop these as terms of cultural critique.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Community Psychol
September 2025
Department of Behavioral, Social and Health Education Sciences, Rollins School of Public Health at Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia, USA.
Over the last decade, a range of research has demonstrated the detrimental impacts of policies criminalizing migration ("crimmigration") on Latinx mental health. In this study, we seek to examine youth perspectives on how crimmigration policies affect Latinx adolescents' connections to Latinx identity, culture, and communities and the implications for Latinx youth mental health. We explored how immigration enforcement policies affect Latinx youths' mental health using photovoice with ten youth in a high-deportation county in Atlanta in 2022.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin J Am Soc Nephrol
September 2025
Division of Nephrology, Department of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland USA.
Socioeconomic, environmental and lifestyle factors shape kidney health. Among the social determinants of health, access to healthy foods is particularly significant. As a basic need, food is integral to an individual's identity, culture, and health.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Adolesc
September 2025
California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo, California, USA.
Introduction: The present research examined whether Black and Latine adolescents' academic persistence could be promoted through two novel strength-based reflection activities, providing them an opportunity to experience a sense of school belonging and to form meaningful connections between their racial/ethnic identity and their ideal future identity they aspired for.
Methods: A randomized-controlled experiment was conducted in the U.S.
Front Genet
August 2025
Center for Biomedical Ethics and Society, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN, United States.
Research carried out by Vanderbilt University's and Medical Center's federally-funded transdisciplinary, highly interactive GetPreCiSe Center in Excellence for ELSI research on genomic privacy-involving over 40 scholars across computer and social sciences, law, and the humanities-is summarized by dividing the work into five categories: (1) the nature of risks posed by collection of genetic data; (2) legal and scientific methods of minimizing those risks; (3) methods of safely increasing the scope of genetic databases; (4) public perceptions of genetic privacy; and (5) cultural depictions of genetic privacy. While this research shows that the risk of unauthorized re-identification is often over-stated, it also identifies possible ways privacy can be compromised. Several technical and legal methods for reducing privacy risks are described, most of which focus not on collection of the data, but rather on regulating data security, access, and use once it is collected.
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