“…These results are in line of some studies that report disadvantages in the cognitive development of twins when compared with singletons during childhood or adulthood (Allin & Fischbein, ; Hay, O’Brien, Johnston, & Prior, ; Myrianthopoulos, Nichols, Broman, ; Record, McKeown, & Edwards, ; Tsou et al, ), and this might be attributable to both prenatal and postnatal factors. Furthermore, several studies link obstetric and neonatal variables to LDs in reading, writing, and arithmetic, such as multiple pregnancy, maternal stress, medication use, tobacco and alcohol consumption, vaginal bleeding, anesthesia, duration of labor, use of forceps, fetal presentation, placental abruption, birthweight, gestational age, perinatal asphyxia, neonatal hyperbilirubinaemia, and exposure to alcohol and other medications or certain infectious diseases such as toxoplasmosis and rubella (Cho et al, ; Chyi et al, ; Guarini et al, ; van Handel et al, ; Hokkanen, Launes, & Michelsson, ; Holm & Crosbie, ; Jain & Pandey, ; Jansson‐Verkasalo et al, ; Johnson et al, ; Kovachy, Adams, Tamaresis, & Feldman, ; Liu et al, ; Mascheretti et al, ; Morse et al, ; Roberts et al, ; Wolke et al, ).…”