Sánchez Alan, Favara Marta, Sheridan Margaret, Behrman Jere
Grupo de Análisis para el Desarrollo (GRADE) (Lima, Peru), and Oxford Department of International Development, University of Oxford (Oxford, UK).
Oxford Department of International Development, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
World Dev. 2024 Apr;176. doi: 10.1016/j.worlddev.2023.106480. Epub 2023 Dec 16.
The existing evidence linking early undernutrition to educational outcomes in developing countries is largely focused on assessing its impacts on grade attainment and achievement test scores, with limited evidence on the foundational cognitive skills required to perform well at school. We use unique data collected in Ethiopia and Peru as part of the Young Lives Study to investigate the relationship between early undernutrition and four foundational cognitive skills measured later in childhood, the first two of which measure executive functioning: working memory, inhibitory control, long-term memory, and implicit learning. We exploit the rich longitudinal data available to control for potential confounders at the household and individual level and for time-invariant community characteristics. We also take advantage of the availability of data for paired-siblings to obtain household fixed-effects estimates. In the latter specification, we find robust evidence that stunting at ~ age 5 is negatively related with executive functions measured years later, predicting reductions in working memory and inhibitory control by 12.6% and 5.8% of a standard deviation. Although the main cohort of Young Lives was around 12 years old when executive functions were measured, complementary results and analysis of the data available for the younger siblings suggest that the impact of stunting on executive functions-specifically, on working memory-starts at an earlier age. Our results shed light on the mechanisms that explain the relationship between early nutrition and school achievement tests suggesting that good nutrition is an important determinant of children's learning capacities.
现有证据表明,发展中国家早期营养不良与教育成果之间的联系主要集中在评估其对学业成绩和成就测试分数的影响上,而关于在学校取得良好成绩所需的基础认知技能的证据有限。我们使用在埃塞俄比亚和秘鲁收集的独特数据,作为“青年生活研究”的一部分,来调查早期营养不良与儿童后期测量的四种基础认知技能之间的关系,其中前两种测量执行功能:工作记忆、抑制控制、长期记忆和内隐学习。我们利用丰富的纵向数据来控制家庭和个人层面的潜在混杂因素以及时间不变的社区特征。我们还利用配对兄弟姐妹的数据来获得家庭固定效应估计值。在后者的规范中,我们发现有力的证据表明,5岁左右的发育迟缓与多年后测量的执行功能呈负相关,预测工作记忆和抑制控制分别减少标准差的12.6%和5.8%。尽管“青年生活”的主要队列在测量执行功能时大约12岁,但对较年轻兄弟姐妹可用数据的补充结果和分析表明,发育迟缓对执行功能的影响——特别是对工作记忆的影响——在更早的年龄就开始了。我们的研究结果揭示了解释早期营养与学校成绩测试之间关系的机制,表明良好的营养是儿童学习能力的重要决定因素。