Recognition and Recall in Low Birth Weight Infants

Cognitive abilities of low birth weight infants (1500-2000 grams) were compared to that of normal controls (2500-3500 grams) in tasks using recognition and recall measures. Three groups of infants at different ages: group I (4-6 months), group II (7-9 months), and group III (10-12 months), each cons...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inThe open psychology journal Vol. 2; no. 1; pp. 1 - 7
Main Authors Ittyerah, Miriam, Mangapalli, Anuradha
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 01.01.2009
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Summary:Cognitive abilities of low birth weight infants (1500-2000 grams) were compared to that of normal controls (2500-3500 grams) in tasks using recognition and recall measures. Three groups of infants at different ages: group I (4-6 months), group II (7-9 months), and group III (10-12 months), each consisting of 30 low birth weight and 30 controls participated in the study. Infants of group I were tested for fundamental sensory abilities such as visual recognition memory, auditory and tactile preferences. Infants of group II were tested on tasks of imitation and object permanence, both requiring some form of representation and recall abilities. Infants of group III were tested on inter-modal matching, which required ability for sensory integration. Results indicate that the low birth weight infants performed poorly on all tasks except tactile preferences. They seem to lag behind the normal infants in general, and in some tasks by approximately four weeks. This suggests the importance of brain maturation for the performance of these tasks since previous studies indicate a relationship between birth weight and cognitive performance. Thus intra-uterine growth retardation (IGUR) consequently delays development and is an important determinant of low birth weight.
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ISSN:1874-3501
1874-3501
DOI:10.2174/1874350100902010001