“…Despite the clear etiological importance of the urban environment for psychosis, one of the most critical issue related to this association remains poorly understood: what is the mechanism through which urbanicity impacts risk? Urban environments involve a wide variety of physical (e.g., pollution) and social (e.g., poverty) exposures, and it may be these exposures that explain, in part, why urban environments impact psychosis risk (Abrahamyan Empson et al, 2019;Brown, 2011;Lydia Krabbendam et al, 2020). To this point, a variety of urban-related physical exposures have been shown to increase risk for and exacerbate psychotic symptoms including air pollution (Antonsen, Mok, Webb, Mortensen, McGrath, Agerbo, Brandt, Geels, Christensen, & Carsten Bøcker Pedersen, 2020;Gao et al, 2017;Lary et al, 2015;Liang et al, 2019;Tong et al, 2016), and xenobiotic heavy metal (i.e., lead) exposure (Arinola et al, 2010;Opler et al, 2004Opler et al, , 2008.…”