Biological Nonoptimality and Quality of Postnatal Environment as Codeterminants of Intellectual Development
- 1 October 1986
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by Wiley in Child Development
- Vol. 57 (5) , 1151-1165
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8624.1986.tb00444.x
Abstract
The relation of nonoptimal condition at birth to the intellectual development of children reared in 2 different environments was investigated in a 4 1/2-year longitudinal experiment. Subjects were 80 disadvantaged children, half of whom were randomly assigned at birth to a day-care program designed to prevent mild mental retardation and half to an educationally untreated control group. All subjects for this report were full-term and weighed over 2,500 grams at birth; condition at birth was considered nonoptimal if the 1-min Apgar score was less than or equal to 8. Results indicated that nonoptimal perinatal status had significant adverse effects on 4 1/2-year scores on the McCarthy Scales of Children's Abilities in the control group (p less than .01); however, test scores of children with optimal or nonoptimal Apgars did not differ within the group that received educational treatment. The results provide support for a framework stressing initial biological vulnerability and subsequent environmental insufficiency as cumulative risk factors in the development of children from low SES families.Keywords
This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- Early Experience and Human DevelopmentPublished by Springer Nature ,1982
- The Relation of Home Environment, Cognitive Competence, and IQ among Males and FemalesChild Development, 1980
- The optimality conceptEarly Human Development, 1980
- The Relation of Infants' Home Environments to Mental Test Performance at Fifty-Four Months: A Follow-Up StudyChild Development, 1976
- Social Class and Infant IntelligencePublished by Springer Nature ,1976
- The Relation of Infants' Home Environments to Mental Test Performance from Six to Thirty-Six Months: A Longitudinal AnalysisChild Development, 1975
- Some problems in the nonorthogonal analysis of variance.Psychological Bulletin, 1974
- Night Waking in Infants During the First 14 MonthsDevelopmental Medicine and Child Neurology, 1973
- Assessment of the Infant at RiskClinical Obstetrics and Gynecology, 1973
- Individual Differences in AttentionAmerican Journal of Diseases of Children, 1967