Watching a baby babble, play and interact with others can provide useful insight into what their cognitive ability might be like decades later, according to new University of Colorado Boulder research published in the journal PNAS.
The study of more than 1,000 twins found that tests as early as 7 months of age can help predict performance on cognitive measures at age 30.
It also found that an infant’s environment plays a more significant role in shaping life-long cognition than scientists realized. It could even influence risk of dementia later in life, the authors said.
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Early Baby Behavior Predicts Adult Cognition and Intelligence
neurosciencenews.com
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A new study reveals that cognitive tests in infancy can modestly predict intelligence three decades later.
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