“…For example, damage may affect "cognitive processes involving elaboration, amplification, and interrelated perception of incoming sensory information (secondary) and cross-modal integration of information (tertiary) across different sensory modalities and cortical zones" (Beaumont, 1983;Luria, 1973, cited in Emory et al, 1992. In children who have been born full-term in the absence of evidence of intellectual disability, damage to these areas is shown in disinhibition syndromes such as hyperactivity and attention, as well as more generally in learning disorders (Emory et al, 1992). It is possible that being born SGA involves a degree of hypoxia and other subclinical perinatal insults and provides an explanation of impairment in secondary and tertiary functioning shown in this study.…”