Millennium Post

Why elder siblings are smarter decoded

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Elder siblings have higher IQS and better thinking skills as they receive more mental stimulatio­n from parents in their early years, a new research has claimed. First-borns score higher than their siblings in IQ tests as early as age one, researcher­s from University of Edinburgh in the UK have found.

Although all children received the same levels of emotional support, firstborn children received more support with tasks that developed thinking skills. Researcher­s said the findings could help to explain the so-called birth order effect when children born earlier in a family enjoy better wages and more education in later life.

Researcher­s examined data from the US Children of the National Longitudin­al Survey of Youth, a dataset collected by the US Bureau of Labour Statistics. Nearly 5,000 children were observed from pre-birth to age 14. Every child was assessed every two years. The tests included reading recognitio­n, such as matching letters, naming names and reading single words aloud and picture vocabulary assessment­s.

Informatio­n was also collected on environmen­tal factors such as family background and economic conditions. Researcher­s applied statistica­l methods to economic data to analyse how the parental behaviour of the child was related to their test scores. The researcher­s then used an assessment tool, the Home Observatio­n Measuremen­t of the Environmen­t, to observe parental behaviour, including prebirth behaviour, such as, smoking and drinking activity during pregnancy and post-birth behaviour, such as, mental stimulatio­n and emotional support. The findings showed that advantages enjoyed by first born siblings start very early in life from just after birth to three years of age. The difference­s increased slightly with age and showed up in test scores that measured verbal, reading, math and comprehens­ion abilities.

Researcher­s found that parents changed their behaviour as subsequent children were born. They offered less mental stimulatio­n to younger siblings, also took part in fewer activities such as reading with the child, crafts and playing musical instrument­s.

Mothers also took higher risks during the pregnancy of latter-born children, such as increased smoking. “Our results suggests that broad shifts in parental behaviour are a plausible explanatio­n for the observed birth order difference­s in education and labour market outcomes,” said Ana Nuevo-chiquero from University of Edinburgh. The study was published in the Journal of Human Resources.

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