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Hartlage, Lawrence; And Others – 1983
To assess the relationship between specific neonatal variables and subsequent mental development, a longitudinal study of 41 children from a high-risk neonatal nursery was conducted. For each child, 58 measures of neonatal condition (e.g., head size, various laboratory values, delivery mode) were available, as were developmental assessments up to…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Correlation, High Risk Persons, Longitudinal Studies
LaVeck, Beverly; And Others – 1981
This study presents research findings of a four year study intended to identify infant and family characteristics which, singly or in combination, predict developmental problems during preschool and school years. Predictors included a variety of measures of parental and neonatal biological conditions as well as measures of the quality of the…
Descriptors: Behavior Development, Cognitive Development, Congenital Impairments, Family Environment
Williams, Doris K. – 1978
This longitudinal study examined the relationship of the physical-neurological conditions of infants at one minute after birth to mental and motor development at prekindergarten and kindergarten levels. Subjects were 44 children, 16 males and 28 females, born in 1970 in the same hospital. Neonatal physical status one minute after birth was…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Correlation, Early Childhood Education, Educational Assessment
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Ellison, Patricia; Foster, Mark – ACTA Paediatrica, 1992
Examined over 200 perinatal variables relating to mothers and to children's neurological, cognitive, and motor functions at 15 months and 4 and 7 years. Factor analysis identified latent variables that characterized covariations among perinatal variables. There were many correlations to children's outcomes, particularly for variables relating to…
Descriptors: Child Development, Cognitive Development, Followup Studies, Longitudinal Studies
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
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Corbett, S. S.; Drewett, R. F. – Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 2004
Background: Previous empirical studies of the cognitive sequelae of failure to thrive in infancy have led to apparently inconsistent conclusions. Methods: Studies of cognitive abilities in failure to thrive were located through published bibliographies, supplemented by a search through MEDLINE. They were classified (a) into those in which the…
Descriptors: Hospitals, Child Health, Intelligence Quotient, Infants