Stereotyped Behavior
Stereotyped Behavior is lacking originality, creativity, or individuality in a person or child.
Stereotyped Behavior - most related articles:
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Improved behavior and sleep after adenotonsillectomy in children - 2.9
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Boxed warning required for Chantix and Zyban, says FDA - 2.6
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Childhood lead exposure is a risk factor for criminal behavior - 2.4
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Fighting HIV in South Africa should focus on couples - 2.3
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Pfizer's anti smoking Chantix latest safety information - 2.1
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3 in 1000 US children diagnosed with Tourette syndrome - 2.1
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Poor sleep leads to health and behavior problems in young diabetics - 2.1
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Chromosomal abnormalities play substantial role in autism - 2.1
Stereotyped Behavior articles
Autism changes molecular structure of brainA new UCLA study is the first to reveal how the autism disorder makes its mark at the molecular level, resulting in an autistic brain that differs dramatically in structure from a healthy one.
Autism's earliest symptoms not in infants under 6 monthsA study of the development of autism in infants, comparing the behavior of the siblings of children diagnosed with autism to that of babies developing normally, has found that the nascent symptoms of the condition - a lack of shared eye contact, smiling and communicative babbling - are not present at 6 months, but emerge gradually and only become apparent during the latter part of the first year of life.
Autism linked to being firstborn, breech births or older momsChildren who are firstborn or breech or whose mothers are 35 or older when giving birth are at significantly greater risk for developing an autism spectrum disorder, University of Utah School of Medicine researchers have reported in a new study with Utah children.
Rainfall linked to autismChildren living in counties with higher levels of annual precipitation appear more likely to have higher prevalence rates of autism, according to a report in the November issue of Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, one of the JAMA/Archives journals. The results raise the possibility that an environmental trigger for autism may be associated with precipitation and may affect genetically vulnerable children.
4 Stereotyped Behavior articles listed above.
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What is Stereotyped Behavior
Stereotyped Behavior is lacking originality, creativity, or individuality in a person or child.