Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
10459510 Intelligence 2005 20 Pages PDF
Abstract
The present study explored the dimensionality of cognition at 12 months by factor analyzing data from a large cohort of preterm and full-term infants (N=182). Two analyses were done. In the first, using only measures used earlier, when the infants were 7 months of age, the same three factors emerged at 12 months as at the earlier age-namely, Attention (look duration and shift rate), Speed (reaction time), and Recognition Memory (novelty responses). Together, they accounted for 36% of the variance. Loadings for all three factors closely resembled those from the 7-month solution, and individuals showed cross-age stability on factor scores, r=0.24-0.51. The second analysis used an expanded battery of tasks, including some capturing higher order cognitive abilities. The same three factors emerged, along with two new ones-Recall (reproduction of event sequences) and Representational Competence (performance on cross-modal transfer and object permanence) with the five together accounting for 42% of the variance. The results support the idea that discrete cognitive abilities can be detected early in infancy and that these abilities show continuity over the first year.
Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Psychology Experimental and Cognitive Psychology
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