Table 4.
Model 1 | Model 2 | Model 3 | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Coefficient [95%CI] | p | Coefficient [95%CI] | p | Coefficient [95%CI] | p | |
Motor activation | −0.174 [− 0.254, − 0.095] | < .001 | − 0.245 [− 0.339, − 0.150] | < .001 | −0.225 [− 0.317, − 0.133] | < .001 |
Perceptual sensitivity | 0.132 [0.069, 0.195] | < .001 | 0.169 [0.092, 0.245] | < .001 | 0.150 [0.076, 0.225] | < .001 |
Attentional shifting | 0.178 [0.095, 0.262] | < .001 | 0.071 [−0.026, 0.168] | .15 | 0.063 [−0.030, 0.156] | .18 |
Inhibitory control | 0.145 [0.072, 0.218] | < .001 | 0.082 [−0.001, 0.165] | .05 | 0.066 [−0.015, 0.146] | .11 |
Note. Model 1 = Univariate; Model 2 = Adjusted for other subscales of the Early Child Behavior Questionnaire Subscales (ECBQ); Model 3 = Model 2 with further adjustment for child sex, birth weight, gestational age at birth, birth order, age of the mother, years of maternal education, annual household income, maternal history of mood/anxiety disorders. CI Confidence intervals. Bold types represent p < .0013. The regression coefficients shown in Table 4 indicate the amount of predicted change in the z-score of receptive language skills per one unit of change in each of the ECBQ subscales. Again, this implies that a child scoring 7 (maximum) in motor activation, for example, was predicted to score − 0.225 × 6 (7 minus 1 point in the subscale) = − 1.350 points, corresponding to − 1.350 SD higher lower in the receptive language skills score at 40 months compared with a child scoring 1 (minimum)