The present report assesses information processing in the toddler years (24 and 36 months), using a cohort of preterms (<1750 g) and full-terms initially seen in infancy. The children received a battery of tasks tapping 11 specific abilities from four domains -memory, processing speed, attention, and representational competence. The same battery had been used earlier -at 7 and 12 months. There were four main findings. (1) Preterms showed no 'catch-up,' but rather persistent deficits in immediate recognition, recall, encoding speed, and attention. (2) There was significant continuity from infancy through the toddler years for most aspects of information processing. (3) These specific abilities combined additively to account for global cognitive ability, consistent with the componential theory of intelligence. (4) Toddler information processing abilities completely mediated the relative deficits of preterms in general cognitive ability. Thus, although the toddler years have often been characterized as a period of discontinuity and transformation, these results indicate that continuity prevails for information processing abilities over the first three years of life.Information processing studies have largely neglected the period of toddlerhood (2-3 years). By contrast, studies of information processing in the first year of life have blossomed over the past few decades. As detailed below, there is now considerable knowledge about the cognitive capabilities of infants and about how basic information processing abilities from this period form the building blocks of later cognition. Considering that later IQ can be predicted from information processing in the first year of life, one would expect these infant cognitive abilities would show continuity through the toddler years. Yet at present there is little evidence that this is so. Moreover, a long tradition of thought views the toddler period as one of major transitions and cognitive discontinuities. This tradition stems largely from the thinking of Piaget and the failure of standardized infant tests to predict later IQ. The present study fills this gap in our knowledge about information processing abilities in toddlerhood, and traces the sources of these abilities to continuity with information processing in infancy.Corresponding author: Susan A. Rose, Departments of Pediatrics and Psychiatry, Kennedy Center, Albert Einstein College of Medicine/ Children's Hospital at Montefiore, 1300 Morris Park Avenue, Bronx, NY 10461. Tel: 718-430-3042. Fax: 718-430-8544. Publisher's Disclaimer: This is a PDF file of an unedited manuscript that has been accepted for publication. As a service to our customers we are providing this early version of the manuscript. The manuscript will undergo copyediting, typesetting, and review of the resulting proof before it is published in its final citable form. Please note that during the production process errors may be discovered which could affect the content, and all legal disclaimers that apply to the journal pertain.
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