1972
DOI: 10.1111/j.1469-8749.1972.tb02591.x
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Visual Evoked Responses at Birth, Verbal Scores at Three Years, and IQ at Four Years

Abstract: SUMMARY In an attempt to determine whether neonatal evoked response measurements are predictive of subsequent verbal and intellectual abilities, a study was made of the relationship between visual evoked response at birth, three measures of speech and language at three years, and Stanford‐Binet scores at four years. Results from 828 children showed that articulation of initial and final consonants at three years was significantly greater in the children who had shown shorter latencies of evoked potentials in t… Show more

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Cited by 17 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Previously, latency measurements of visual evoked responses (VER) in the neonatal period have been related to subsequent measurements of developmental landmarks such as performance at eight months of age on the Bayley scale (Butler and Engel 1969), walking and talking at one year (Jensen and Engel 1971), articulation and language comprehension at three yeais, and VER measures predicted one and three-year maturational scores when motor skills are involved (Engel and Fay 1972). Although significant for the groups of children, the relationships were too low for effective individual prediction.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Previously, latency measurements of visual evoked responses (VER) in the neonatal period have been related to subsequent measurements of developmental landmarks such as performance at eight months of age on the Bayley scale (Butler and Engel 1969), walking and talking at one year (Jensen and Engel 1971), articulation and language comprehension at three yeais, and VER measures predicted one and three-year maturational scores when motor skills are involved (Engel and Fay 1972). Although significant for the groups of children, the relationships were too low for effective individual prediction.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In 1964, Hrbek and Mares, in their study involving term and preterm infants, noted that a proportion of babies who had suffered anoxic brain damage had an absent VER response. In the following years the maturational changes of preterm infants (Engel 1965) and those that occur from term to six months of age were described (Ferris et al 1967). Our results for normal preterm infants conform very closely with those studies and show the same maturational changes in PZ latency.…”
Section: Neurodevelopmen Tal F Ollo W-upmentioning
confidence: 99%