The sleep organization of 15 normal infants (seven boys, eight girls) was studied at their homes during six 24-hour periods, i.e. at 3, 6, 9, 12, 18, and 24 months of age, using the Oxford Medical System. Sleep states and stages were scored visually at 30-second intervals, according to Rechtschaffen and Kales' criteria, adapted for children by Guilleminault. All sleep parameters were analyzed for the entire 24-hour period, i.e. during both the nocturnal and the diurnal part of the nycthemere. The results showed a continuous decrease in total sleep time, rapid eye movement (REM) sleep, and indeterminate sleep, and also an increase in waking time, quiet sleep, and stages 1 and 2 sleep. Except for slow-wave sleep, which remained very stable for the different ages, analysis of variance applied to the data showed clear age and day-night effects on sleep ontogenesis. Modifications with age were more precocious and more pronounced for the diurnal part of the nycthemere, especially as regards REM sleep. For the nocturnal part, there was a significant increase in sleep efficiency and in the length of the REM period after 12 months of age, while total sleep duration and number of awakenings decreased. In addition to normative data for clinical use, this study provides three new interesting results related to the maturation of sleep mechanisms and functions: 1) the high stability of the percentage of slow-wave sleep along these 2 years, 2) the presence (from 12 months of age) of a stage 2/REM sleep ratio equal to one, and a sleep change occuring earlier, during the diurnal rather than the nocturnal part of the nycthemere. The first two points could be regarded as indexes of sleep maturation reflecting developmental and neurophysiological changes in central nervous system structures. The third point underlines the importance of the circadian rhythm and the concept of "experience" in the maturation of sleep.
No abstract
It is common that intellectually gifted children—that is, children with an IQ ≥ 130—are referred to paediatric or child neuropsychiatry clinics for socio-emotional problems and/or school underachievement or maladjustment. These clinically-referred children with intellectual giftedness are thought to typically display internalizing problems (i.e., self-focused problems reflecting overcontrol of emotion and behavior), and to be more behaviorally impaired when “highly” gifted (IQ ≥ 145) or displaying developmental asynchrony (i.e., a heterogeneous developmental pattern, reflected in a significant verbal-performance discrepancy on IQ tests). We tested all these assumptions in 143 clinically-referred gifted children aged 8 to 12, using Wechsler's intelligence profile and the Child Behavior Checklist. Compared to a normative sample, gifted children displayed increased behavioral problems in the whole symptomatic range. Internalizing problems did not predominate over externalizing ones (i.e., acted-out problems, reflecting undercontrol of emotion and behavior), revealing a symptomatic nature of behavioral syndromes more severe than expected. “Highly gifted” children did not display more behavioral problems than the “low gifted.” Gifted children with a significant verbal-performance discrepancy displayed more externalizing problems and mixed behavioral syndromes than gifted children without such a discrepancy. These results suggest that developmental asynchrony matters when examining emotional and behavioral problems in gifted children.
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