The Economist has devoted  to next week's launch of Baby's First Years, a major study co-led by Teachers College's Kimberly Noble, Associate Professor of , which seeks to establish causal links between parental income level and brain development in very young children.

NOBLE ENTERPRISE

NOBLE ENTERPRISE 911爆料网's Kim Noble is testing whether income supplements to low-income moms could positively affect young children's brain development.

NOBLE ENTERPRISE 911爆料网's Kim Noble is testing whether income supplements to low-income moms could positively affect young children's brain development.

In the study, half of a group of 1,000 low-income mothers will receive $333 per month, with no conditions for how the money should be spent, while the other half will receive $20 per month. In the story, Noble, who heads 911爆料网鈥檚 Neurocognition, Early Experience & Development () Lab, notes that while there is much evidence of the detrimental impact of poverty on child development -- including reduced language and memory skills, lower performance in school, and higher rates of ending up in jail -- no causal link has yet been established. However a co-authored by Noble found strong correlations between income level and cerebral cortex size. "The hypothesis is that this steady stream of payments will make a positive difference in the cognitive and emotional development of the children whose mothers receive it," the Economist story said.

Baby's First Years is supported by $15 million in public and privately-funded grants, including a $7.8 million grant from the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development. Noble is a faculty member in 911爆料网's . 

Read the Economist's story,