The researchers followed each child for more than 40 years and over and over again, the group who waited patiently for the second marshmallow succeed in whatever capacity they were measuring.
Researchers followed these children from the age of 12 through to the age of 52.
For the new study,
the researchers followed the children of 233 African - American and Dominican women in New York City.
For example, Swedish
researchers followed children from birth to age five and found that the absence of certain bacteria preceded the development of allergic disorders.
Consider a 2010 study done in Dunedin, New Zealand, in which
researchers followed every child born in the city over the course of a year — more than a thousand children.
Researchers followed the children until the end of Year 1 and are currently analysing that data in an effort to understand more about writing fluency and quality in the early years.
Researchers followed these children from the age of 12 through to the age of 52.
Not exact matches
Using longitudinal data from the nine - decade - long Terman life - cycle study, which has
followed the lives and career outcomes of a group of gifted
children since 1922,
researchers Timothy A. Judge of Notre Dame and John D. Kammeyer - Mueller of the University of Florida analyzed the characteristics of the most ambitious among them.
Now that the link's been established in this small group, the
researchers noted, more research needs to be done to explore the neurological component of the condition, as well as
follow - up monitoring to see how the condition plays out as the
children grow up.
For a
follow - up experiment the
researchers had
children perform the same task, but also asked some of them to use their hands to show how they could use the object.
The NIH
researchers followed 125 women, starting with a sensitive chemical test for ovulation all the way through to the birth of one
child.
The intervention itself ended after two years, but the
researchers have
followed the
children ever since.
For the new study, the
researchers were able to
follow - up with 225 of the
children from the original study.
Researchers have found that parents and
children ask fewer questions when reading an e-book together, and
children have more trouble
following along.
The sling was first designed in 1981 by Dr. Rayner Garner, a British
researcher into
child development,
followed with years of testing, adapting, and refining by Dr. Garner and California Diversified Manufacturing.
The widespread assumption of safety has led
researchers in fetal behaviour to assure women volunteering for clinical trials that ultrasound exposure of one to one - and - a-half hours (sometimes on more than one occasion) is safe for their unborn babies - yet we know of no
follow - up of these exposed
children.
Message from Ivana «Dear Parents, Future Parents, Spiritual
Researchers, After many years that I've spent examining and studying
children's psychology and exploring the wonders of pedagogy some essential questions kept
following me and inspiring my journey: - Is there such a thing as an ideal parent and an ideal growing environment for our
children?
The
researchers observed higher levels of lead in
children with autism throughout development, with the greatest disparity observed during the period
following birth.
Meanwhile, the
researchers also are beginning a multidisciplinary study to
follow pregnant women and their infants to see whether psychosocial stressors and adversity experienced during pregnancy and the first three years of a
child's life also affect brain development and overall health.
Researchers followed a nationally representative group of 37,577 Canadian
children aged 0 to 11.
More
children are living in high - poverty neighborhoods
following the Great Recession — a troubling shift because
children in these neighborhoods are a year behind academically, according to new research from
researchers at Rice University, the University of Pennsylvania and the University of Wisconsin.
The
researchers next
followed up with parents when their
children reached the age of 7.
The lead
researcher Prof Wolke, who is based at the University of Warwick's Department of Psychology and at Warwick Medical School, concludes: «Our findings lead us to recommend that all preterm
children born before 34 weeks of gestation may benefit from regular
follow - up after discharge from hospital.
Researchers at Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit,
following 448
children from birth for seven years, reported that
children who received antibiotics within their first six months had a higher risk of developing allergies and asthma.
The
researchers followed 392
children from a slum called Mirpur from birth until the age of two.
«State laws requiring autism coverage by private insurers led to increases in autism care: Autism mandates
followed by large jump in spending by health plans on care for
children with autism, say
researchers.»
Using a major new data source — merged birth and school records for all
children born in Florida from 1992 to 2002 — the
researchers studied the relationships between birth weight and cognitive development by
following more than 1.3 million
children and nearly 15,000 pairs of twins from birth through middle school.
Children who had existing neurological or developmental issues at the time of a CSE were more likely to have a neurological problem at
follow up,
researchers say.
Since the long - term health effects experienced by
children following severe disease likely differs from that of adults,
researchers said that additional studies are needed to determine the health needs for
children who survive EVD.
The study looked at chilldren who had been
followed by
researchers since they were 5 months old as part of the Quebec Longitudinal Study of
Child Development.
Researchers based at the University of Edinburgh and UCL (University College London)
followed the health of more than 100
children for nine years after they had CSE.
The
researchers found that compared to measles - unvaccinated
children, survival rates for measles - vaccinated
children increased by a staggering 28 % in the first 12 months of
follow - up and 18 % by five years of age.
Researchers from the Christine E. Lynn College of Nursing at Florida Atlantic University and collaborators conducted a longitudinal study with a racially and ethnically diverse sample to look at the relationships between spiritual and religious coping strategies, and grief, mental health, including depression and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and personal growth for parents at one and three months
following the death of their
child in a NICU or PICU.
The
researchers used eye - tracking technology to
follow the
children's gaze as they watched the videos.
After recording these base memories, the
researchers followed up with the
children years later, asking them to recall the events that they recounted at age three.
Researchers also conducted
follow - up visits with the
children three months after the initial study period and found that their improvement had been maintained during that time.
Funded by the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of
Child Health and Human Development,
researchers are
following 200 infants with congenital Zika syndrome and their families to understand the ongoing health impact, why some babies affected by the virus develop more normally than others, and if more positive prognoses are linked with family or environmental characteristics.
In experiments where the
researcher doesn't respond, these
children wait for the person to
follow and look.
With the current study only
following children up to age 7.5 years, the
researchers said longer term studies will be needed for a more complete understanding of the developmental, emotional and social outcomes for
children with prenatal methamphetamine exposure.
The
researchers, including Pillai Riddell, Professor David Flora and lead author PhD candidate Nicole Racine, observed 202 parents in the Greater Toronto Area and 130
children between four and five years of age — these
children were among the 760 who were
followed at the first wave at two, four, six and / or 12 - month immunizations.
A new study conducted by
researchers at the
Child Study Center at NYU Langone Medical Center found men diagnosed as
children with attention - deficit / hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) were twice as likely to be obese in a 33 - year
follow - up study compared to men who were not diagnosed with the condition.
The
researchers then
followed the
children up when they were aged 5 - 7 to explore whether earlier feeding practices influenced the development of emotional eating in the
children.
The
researchers looked at first - trimester exposures to ARVs in a group of 2,580 HIV - exposed, uninfected
children enrolled between 2007 and 2012 in an ongoing U.S. study that
follows HIV - infected pregnant women and their
children — the Pediatric HIV / AIDS Cohort Study (PHACS) Surveillance Monitoring of ART Toxicities (SMARTT) study.
There's both good news and bad news for
researchers who had worried about a new design released this week for the troubled National
Children's Study, a $ 3 billion plan to follow 100,000 children from before birth to
Children's Study, a $ 3 billion plan to
follow 100,000
children from before birth to
children from before birth to age 21.
The
researchers then
followed up on the abilities of
children from all three groups, soon after the intervention, as well as six and 12 months later.
One of the
researchers behind the study, medical doctor and PhD student Ole Köhler - Forsberg from the Department of Clinical Medicine at Aarhus University, explains that over time there has — quite rightly — been an awareness of how
children develop and perform intellectually
following serious illnesses and hospitalisations.
Using data from a sample of 2,615 active duty military families, living at designated military installations with a
child ages 3 - 17, a group of
researchers led by Dr. Patricia Lester, of the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior, examined the impact of FOCUS on behavioral health outcomes, including depression, anxiety, and
child pro-social behavior over two
follow up assessments.
Although the proportion of families whose
children were identified with abuse or neglect was low, the
researchers found there was an elevated risk of abuse and neglect specifically during the six months immediately
following a soldier's one - time deployment.
The
researchers followed a group of
children in the Preschool Depression Study, conducted by investigators led by Joan L. Luby, MD, director of Washington University School of Medicine's Early Emotional Development Program.
In addition to replication studies by other
researchers, she added that ideally the
children in this cohort should be
followed later into childhood and adolescence.