Publications by authors named "Lawrence Harper"

Article Synopsis
  • The experiences and behaviors of animals, including humans, can be influenced by what their parents encountered, affecting how they respond to environmental challenges.
  • In mammals, this influence can occur through connections in the womb, parenting styles, and inherited cultural practices, with genetic expression being modified rather than the DNA itself.
  • Conditions that lead to the evolution of these inherited traits often arise when adjustments to environmental changes need to be made ahead of time, especially when facing recurring challenges that could pose significant risks if not anticipated.
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We evaluated how right- and the left-temporal lobe activation of first (1(st) LR), second (2(nd)LR), and third (3(rd)LR) level readers (N = 60; Age = 6-9 years) varied with reading level, word characteristics, and cognitive abilities by using electroencephalogram measurements while the children read high-frequency/high-imageability, high-frequency/low-imageability, and nonsense words. The ANOVA showed significant interaction effects: 1(st)LR had greater right-hemispheric activation than 3(rd)LR, who had greater left-hemispheric activation; for nonsense words, 1(st)LR had lower left-hemisphere activation than that of 2(nd)LR and 3(rd)LR. The electroencephalogram (EEG) measure of hemispheric asymmetry indicated a developmental effect on lateralized activity in the temporal lobes of beginning readers during word reading.

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Currently, behavioral development is thought to result from the interplay among genetic inheritance, congenital characteristics, cultural contexts, and parental practices as they directly impact the individual. Evolutionary ecology points to another contributor, epigenetic inheritance, the transmission to offspring of parental phenotypic responses to environmental challenges-even when the young do not experience the challenges themselves. Genetic inheritance is not altered, gene expression is.

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