Comparative variability and interval correlation in linear growth of Hong Kong and Sudanese infants

American Journal of Human Biology : the Official Journal of the Human Biology Council
G BrushF Y Zumrawi

Abstract

Growth in length of children during the first 10 months of life in Hong Kong and Khartoum is compared in terms of levels of between-child variability and length and increment correlations. In Khartoum, all measures of variability are strikingly greater, and correlational patterns differ strikingly from those in Hong Kong. Growth in Hong Kong can be explained largely in terms of a mixture of genetic determination and short-term homeostatic cycles. Such a model does not fit the Khartoum data where there is evidence of at least one additional and different systematic force. This appears to arise from infants who are long at birth being handicapped in their subsequent increment by early weaning, but may also involve widespread catch-up growth from birth. © 1992 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

References

Sep 1, 1990·Annals of Human Biology·G A HarrisonT Jewell
Jan 1, 1990·IMA Journal of Mathematics Applied in Medicine and Biology·G Brush, G A Harrison
Dec 1, 1973·Australasian Radiology·W L Wong

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Citations

May 9, 2018·American Journal of Physical Anthropology·Rodrigo Retamal, C G Nicholas Mascie-Taylor
Jan 1, 1993·American Journal of Human Biology : the Official Journal of the Human Biology Council·Michelle Lampl
Nov 1, 1993·American Journal of Physical Anthropology·M A LittleP W Leslie
Aug 10, 2007·Public Health Nutrition·Shamsun NaharHousne Ara Begum
Feb 24, 2001·Annals of Human Biology·E Karim, C G Mascie-Taylor
Jul 1, 1993·Annals of Human Biology·G BrushF Y Zumrawi
Sep 1, 1994·Annals of Human Biology·G A HarrisonF Y Zumrawi

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