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Twins as a natural experiment to study the causes of mild language delay: I: Design; twin-singleton differences in language, and obstetric risks.

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TLDR
For instance, this paper found that the verbal cognitive score of twins was about half a standard deviation lower than that of singletons at 3 years, and that the differences in language level were not associated with obstetric/perinatal features as assessed from both parental reports and medical records.
Abstract
Background:Twins tend to lag behind singletons in their language development, but the causes were unknown. The possibilities suggested include obstetric complications, twin-specific features, and postnatal differences in family interaction. The present study was designed to pit these alternatives against one another as possible causal influences. Method:The Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC) was used to identify the 116 twin pairs (of whom 96 participated) and 114 pairs of singletons (of whom 98 participated) whose ages were no more than 30 months apart. The McArthur Communicative Development Inventory was completed at 20 months, and the Pre-School Language Scales (PLS-3), and the McCarthy Scales of Children's Abilities at 36 months. Obstetric and perinatal complications were assessed on the basis of detailed systematic parental reports, together with a systematic coded abstraction of all medical records dealing with pregnancy and the neonatal period. Family background details were assessed from parental reports, and the primary carer's verbal functioning was assessed by the Mill Hill Vocabulary Scale. Congenital anomalies were assessed using the method of Waldrop and Halverson. Results:The language of twins was 1.7 months below that of singletons at 20 months and 3.1 months at 3 years. The verbal cognitive score of twins was about half a standard deviation lower than that of singletons. The twin–singleton differences in language level were found to be unassociated with obstetric/perinatal features as assessed from both parental reports and medical records, to birthweight or gestation, to birthweight discrepancy within the twin pair, or to congenital anomalies. Conclusions:It is concluded that obstetric/perinatal features do not account for the slower language development in twins as compared with singletons, within a sample born after at least 33 weeks gestation.

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Citations
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Using sex differences in psychopathology to study causal mechanisms: unifying issues and research strategies.

TL;DR: The systematic investigation of sex differences constitutes an invaluable tool for the study of the causal processes concerned with psychopathology.
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Maternal depressive symptoms in the postnatal period are associated with long-term impairment of mother-child bonding.

TL;DR: Maternal depressive symptoms at 2 weeks, 6 weeks and four months postnatally but not at fourteen months of infant’s age were found to be strongly associated with lower quality of maternal bonding to the infant and child from two weeks until 14 months of postnatal age.
Journal ArticleDOI

Late language emergence at 24 months: an epidemiological study of prevalence, predictors, and covariates.

TL;DR: Results are congruent with models of language emergence and impairment that posit a strong role for neurobiological and genetic mechanisms of onset that operate across a wide variation in maternal and family characteristics.
Journal ArticleDOI

Proceeding From Observed Correlation to Causal Inference: The Use of Natural Experiments

TL;DR: Fifteen possible types of natural experiments that may be used to test causal inferences with respect to naturally occurring prior causes (rather than planned interventions) are described and it is concluded that, taken in conjunction, natural experiments can be very helpful in both strengthening and weakening causalinferences.
Journal ArticleDOI

Origins of Individual Differences in Theory of Mind: From Nature to Nurture?

TL;DR: Behavioral genetic models of the data showed that environmental factors explained the majority of the variance in ToM performance in this sample and shared environmental influences on verbal ability had a common impact on ToM and explained more than half the phenotypic correlation between these two skills.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The moderator–mediator variable distinction in social psychological research: Conceptual, strategic, and statistical considerations.

TL;DR: This article seeks to make theorists and researchers aware of the importance of not using the terms moderator and mediator interchangeably by carefully elaborating the many ways in which moderators and mediators differ, and delineates the conceptual and strategic implications of making use of such distinctions with regard to a wide range of phenomena.
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ALSPAC--the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children. I. Study methodology.

TL;DR: The comprehensiveness of the ALSPAC approach with a total population sample unselected by disease status, and the availability of parental genotypes, provides an adequate sample for statistical analysis and for avoiding spurious results.
Journal ArticleDOI

Postpartum depression and child development

TL;DR: Murray, Cooper, The role of the Infant and Maternal Factors in Postpartum Depression, Mother Infant Interactions, and Infant Outcome, and Teti, Gelfand, Maternal Cognitions as Mediators of Child Outcomes in the Context of Post partum Depression.
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Behavior-State Matching and Synchrony in Mother-Infant Interactions of Nondepressed versus Depressed Dyads.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors assess the degree to which depressed mother-infant dyads, relative to non-depressed mothers, matched behavior states on a continuous scale from negative to neutral to positive affect.
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Impact of maternal postnatal depression on cognitive development of young children.

TL;DR: Marital conflict and a history of paternal psychiatric problems were independently linked with lower cognitive test scores and together with a working class home background these were the only factors that contributed to the deleterious effect of maternal postnatal depression.
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