Thursday, November 3, 2016

The association between childhood violence victimization and later cognition is largely noncausal

From The Origins of Cognitive Deficits in Victimized Children: Implications for Neuroscientists and Clinicians by Andrea Danese, et al.

Interesting as a strike against post hoc ergo propter hoc reasoning.
Objective:
Individuals reporting a history of childhood violence victimization have impaired brain function. However, the clinical significance, reproducibility, and causality of these findings are disputed. The authors used data from two large cohort studies to address these research questions directly.

Method:
The authors tested the association between prospectively collected measures of childhood violence victimization and cognitive functions in childhood, adolescence, and adulthood among 2,232 members of the U.K. E-Risk Study and 1,037 members of the New Zealand Dunedin Study who were followed up from birth until ages 18 and 38 years, respectively. Multiple measures of victimization and cognition were used, and comparisons were made of cognitive scores for twins discordant for victimization.

Results:
Individuals exposed to childhood victimization had pervasive impairments in clinically relevant cognitive functions, including general intelligence, executive function, processing speed, memory, perceptual reasoning, and verbal comprehension in adolescence and adulthood. However, the observed cognitive deficits in victimized individuals were largely explained by cognitive deficits that predated childhood victimization and by confounding genetic and environmental risks.

Conclusions:
Findings from two population-representative birth cohorts totaling more than 3,000 individuals and born 20 years and 20,000 km apart suggest that the association between childhood violence victimization and later cognition is largely noncausal, in contrast to conventional interpretations. These findings support the adoption of a more circumspect approach to causal inference in the neuroscience of stress. Clinically, cognitive deficits should be conceptualized as individual risk factors for victimization as well as potential complicating features during treatment.
The weakest and least capable among us need the most protection and assistance.

I am interested in the description of the biologically gifted, those having "general intelligence, executive function, processing speed, memory, perceptual reasoning, and verbal comprehension." It answers a need in my model of Knowledge, Experience, Skills, Values, Behaviors, Capability and Motivation as the causal ingredient of outcomes. For Capability, I have been using IQ as a broad proxy but general intelligence, executive function, processing speed, memory, perceptual reasoning, and verbal comprehension is much closer to what I am after.

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