Environmental Effects on Cognitive Abilities

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Attitudinal Flexibility
Auditory Brain Stem Responses
behavioral genetics
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Category=JMH
Category=JMR
child's
children's
Children's Cognitive
Children’s Cognitive
cocaine
cognitive development factors
Community Childhood Hunger Identification Project
Current Family Environment
development
drug
Ecocultural Niche
educational psychology research
environmental impacts on intelligence
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
exposure
family systems theory
High IQ Child
intellectual
Intellectual Flexibility
Intelligence Gains
Iodine Deficient Areas
IQ Child
IQ Gain
IQ Increase
IQ Point
IQ Score
IQ Test
IQ Test Performance
IQ Test Score
Locomotor Activity
Low IQ Child
neurotoxicology
outcome
performance
prenatal
Prenatal Alcohol Exposure
Prenatal Cocaine Exposure
Prenatal Drug Exposure
socioeconomic influences
Target Sibling
WIC Program

Product details

  • ISBN 9780805831832
  • Weight: 884g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Feb 2001
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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It sometimes seems that it is difficult to pick up a current newspaper or a magazine without it containing a story about some behavioral characteristic for which it has been found that a gene is responsible. Even aspects of behavior that one would feel certain are environmentally controlled are now being attributed in part to the effects of the genes. But genes never act alone: Their effects are always filtered through the environment.

The goal of this volume is to discuss how the environment influences the development and the maintenance of cognitive abilities. It is a successor to the editors' 1997 volume, Intelligence, Heredity, and Environment, and a companion to their new volume, Family Environment and Intellectual Functioning: A Life-Span Perspective. Taken together, the two-volume set comprises the most comprehensive existing work on the relation between the environment and cognitive abilities.

Psychologists, parents, social workers, educators, and employers are all likely to find this book of interest.

Robert J. Sternberg, Elena L. Grigorenko