Source - http://www.boston.com/
By - Press Release
Category - Hotel Near FIU
Posted By - Homewood Suites Miami
By - Press Release
Category - Hotel Near FIU
Posted By - Homewood Suites Miami
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| Hotel Near FIU |
Scientists at
University College London suggest that a lack of routine can impair
early development by disrupting the body clock, which can affect the
brain's ability to remember and learn new information.
Results showed that the effect was most
striking in three-year-olds, among whom both boys and girls scored lower
on math, reading, and spatial skills tests that children of the same
age who adhered to rigid bedtime schedules. "Age three
seems to be where you see the largest effect and that is a concern,"
said lead researcher Amanda Sacker. "If a child is having
irregular bedtimes at a young age, they're not synthesizing all the
information around them at that age, and they've got a harder job to do
when they are older," she added. "It sets them off on a more difficult
path." Sacker and her team analyzed data from 11,178
seven-year-old children from the UK Millennium Cohort Study, a long-term
record of British children who are now nearing their teenage years.
While the hour that children went to bed had little or no
consequence on their performance on different tests, having no set
bedtime did, often leading to lower scores. Girls who never had regular
bedtimes at ages three, five, and seven had significantly lower reading,
math, and special scores. For boys, this was the case for those having
non-regular bedtimes at any two of those ages. The study
was published online July 8 in the Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health.
A separate 2011 study from the University of
South Australia reveals that children who go to bed earlier are less
likely to be obese than those who stay up late.

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