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1
Parental Perceptions and Decisions Regarding Maintaining Bilingualism in Autism. ...
Howard, Katie; Gibson, Jenny; Katsos, Napoleon. - : Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository, 2021
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2
Influence of encoding difficulty, word frequency, and phonological regularity on age differences in word naming.
Madden, David J; Allen, Philip A; Bucur, Barbara. - : Informa UK Limited, 2021
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3
Age-related differences in the neural bases of phonological and semantic processes.
Burke, Deborah M; Diaz, Michele T; Madden, David J. - : MIT Press - Journals, 2021
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4
Parental Perceptions and Decisions Regarding Maintaining Bilingualism in Autism.
Howard, Katie; Gibson, Jenny; Katsos, Napoleon. - : Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2021. : J Autism Dev Disord, 2021
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5
DYT-TUBB4A (DYT4 Dystonia): New Clinical and Genetic Observations.
In: Neurology, vol. 96, no. 14, pp. e1887-e1897 (2021)
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6
Prostate-Specimen Antigen (PSA) Screening and Shared Decision Making Among Deaf and Hearing Male Patients.
In: Journal of cancer education : the official journal of the American Association for Cancer Education, vol 35, iss 1 (2020)
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7
Effect of voicing and articulation manner on aerosol particle emission during human speech.
In: PloS one, vol 15, iss 1 (2020)
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8
Health comorbidities and cognitive abilities across the lifespan in Down syndrome. ...
Startin, Carla M; D'Souza, Hana; Ball, George. - : Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository, 2020
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9
Rapid computations of spectrotemporal prediction error support perception of degraded speech. ...
Sohoglu, Ediz; Davis, Matt. - : Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository, 2020
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10
Role of maternal age at birth in child development among Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australian children in their first school year: a population-based cohort study
Abstract: Background: Indigenous Australian children are twice as likely to score poorly on developmental outcomes at age 5 years than their non-Indigenous peers. Indigenous children are also more likely to be born to younger mothers. We aimed to quantify the relationship between maternal age at childbirth and early childhood development outcomes in Indigenous and non-Indigenous children. Methods: In this population-based, retrospective cohort study, we used data from the Australian Early Development Census (AEDC) that were probabilistically linked by the New South Wales (NSW) Centre for Health Record Linkage to several NSW administrative datasets, including the Perinatal Data Collection, the Register of Births, Deaths and Marriages (for birth registrations), the Admitted Patient Data Collection, and public school enrolment records, as part of the Seeding Success study. The resulting data resource comprises a cohort of 166 278 children born in NSW whose first year of school was reported in a 2009 or 2012 AEDC record (which were the years of AEDC data available at the time of data linkage). The primary outcome was the aggregate outcome of developmental vulnerability (scores in the bottom decile, according to the 2009 benchmark, on one or more of the five AEDC domains, which include physical, social, emotional, language and cognitive, and communication development). This outcome was measured in singleton children without special needs recorded on the AEDC, in those with available developmental data. As a secondary outcome analysis, we also repeated the main analyses on the outcome of developmental vulnerability on the individual domains. We estimated the absolute risk of developmental vulnerability by maternal age in Indigenous and non-Indigenous populations, and we also estimated the risk difference and relative risk between Indigenous and non-Indigenous children by use of modified Poisson regression. Findings: Of 166 278 children in the cohort, 107 666 (64·8%) children were enrolled in a public school in NSW in 2009 or 2012, of whom 7994 (7·4%) children were Indigenous (ie, they, or either parent, were recorded as Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander on one or more birth records) and 99 672 (92·6%) children were not Indigenous. After exclusions, the final study population included 99 530 children (7206 [7·2%] Indigenous and 92 324 [92·8%] non-Indigenous). Of those for whom developmental outcome data were available, 2581 (35·9%) of 7180 Indigenous children and 18 071 (19·7%) of 91 835 non-Indigenous children were developmentally vulnerable on one domain or more. The risk of developmental vulnerability decreased with maternal ages between 15 and 39 years, but the decrease in risk with maternal age was significantly steeper in non-Indigenous than Indigenous children. Interpretation: Developmental vulnerability is most common in Indigenous and non-Indigenous children born to young mothers; however, Indigenous children have an increased risk of this outcome across most of the maternal age range. Policies that improve the socioeconomic circumstances of Indigenous children and families could promote better developmental outcomes among Indigenous children. Culturally appropriate support for Indigenous children, including those born to young mothers and disadvantaged families, could also reduce early childhood developmental inequalities ; Mark Hanly, Kathleen Falster, Emily Banks, John Lynch, Georgina M Chambers, Marni Brownell, Anthony Dillon, Sandra Eades, Louisa Jorm
Keyword: Adolescent; Adult; Australia; Child; Child Development; Female; Humans; Indigenous Peoples; Male; Maternal Age; Population Surveillance; Retrospective Studies; Risk Assessment; Socioeconomic Factors; Vulnerable Populations; Young Adult
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/2440/124548
https://doi.org/10.1016/s2352-4642(19)30334-7
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11
Health comorbidities and cognitive abilities across the lifespan in Down syndrome.
Startin, Carla M; D'Souza, Hana; Ball, George. - : Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2020. : J Neurodev Disord, 2020
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12
Nonnative implicit phonetic training in multiple reverberant environments.
In: Attention, perception & psychophysics, vol 81, iss 4 (2019)
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13
Promotion of Healthy Humor Cancer Education Messages for the Deaf Community.
In: Journal of cancer education : the official journal of the American Association for Cancer Education, vol 34, iss 2 (2019)
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14
Children's biobehavioral reactivity to challenge predicts DNA methylation in adolescence and emerging adulthood.
In: Developmental science, vol 22, iss 2 (2019)
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15
How the inference of hierarchical rules unfolds over time.
Eckstein, Maria K; Starr, Ariel; Bunge, Silvia A. - : eScholarship, University of California, 2019
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16
Time Points: A Gestural Study of the Development of Space-Time Mappings.
In: Cognitive science, vol 43, iss 12 (2019)
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17
STXBP1-associated neurodevelopmental disorder: a comparative study of behavioural characteristics. ...
O'Brien, Sinéad; Ng-Cordell, Elise; DDD Study. - : Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository, 2019
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18
Memory for prose in Korsakoff and schizophrenic populations.
Butters, N; Olson, EH; Richter, M. - : Informa UK Limited, 2019
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19
Neural dynamics of semantic composition. ...
Lyu, Bingjiang; Choi, Hun S; Marslen-Wilson, William. - : Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository, 2019
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20
The performance of practitioners conducting facial comparisons on images of children across age
Michalski, D.; Heyer, R.; Semmler, C.. - : Public Library of Science (PLoS), 2019
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