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Journal Article

Citation

Martin A, Razza R, Brooks-Gunn J. Early Child Dev. Care 2012; 182(10): 1247-1263.

Affiliation

National Center for Children and Families, Teachers College, Columbia University, 525 West 120 Street, Box 39, New York, NY 10027.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2012, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/03004430.2011.605522

PMID

22919120

PMCID

PMC3422884

Abstract

Household chaos has been linked to poorer cognitive, behavioral, and self-regulatory outcomes in young children, but the mechanisms responsible remain largely unknown. Using a diverse sample of families in Chicago, the present study tests for the independent contributions made by five indicators of household chaos: noise, crowding, family instability, lack of routine, and television usually on. Chaos was measured at age 2; outcomes measured at age 5 tap receptive vocabulary, attention and behavior problems, and effortful control. Results show that controlling for all other measures of chaos, children with a lack of routine scored lower on receptive vocabulary and delayed gratification, while children whose television was generally on scored higher on aggression and attention problems. The provision of learning materials mediated a small part of the association between television and receptive vocabulary. Family instability, crowding, and noise did not predict any outcomes once other measures of chaos were controlled.


Language: en

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