Talent as Giftedness

Author(s):  
Joanne Haroutounian

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart began composing at the age of four. He toured as a prodigy for three years before the age of ten, astounding audiences with his ability to perform on the harpsichord, voice, organ, and violin. He would compose on sight in different styles and on different instruments. He could “most accurately name from a distance any notes that may be sounded for him either singly or in chords, on the clavier or on every imaginable instrument, including bells, glasses, and clocks.” When his father was recovering from an illness, eight-year-old Wolfgang was not allowed to play the piano. He filled his time by composing his first symphony (K.16) for all instruments of the orchestra. When we hear the word “gifted” in connection with music, the musical prodigy immediately comes to mind. The arguments of recognizing talent through performance, creative endeavors, or music aptitude tests seem incidental in comparison to the possibilities and accomplishments of the musical prodigy. There is no question that these young musicians show incredible levels of musical talent, often exhibiting musical capabilities equal to those of a highly trained adult. Mozart remains the preeminent example of the prodigy, described by his father and teacher as a “God-given miracle,” knowing “in his eighth year what one would expect from a man of forty. Indeed, only he who sees him can believe it.” A prodigy is a child who displays extraordinary talent at an early age. Prodigies occur most often in the field of music, exceeding the total of all other fields combined. Musical prodigies show outstanding abilities at a younger age than other prodigies, with some as young as three or four years old. The field of chess is a distant second place in number, with prodigious achievement often seen at five or six years of age. Relatively few prodigies are identified in the natural sciences, philosophy, dance, or plastic arts. Even the field of mathematics, whose young calculating wonders gain media recognition, have few true prodigies capable of original mathematical reasoning prior to their teen years. The literature offers differing opinions concerning age and prodigious talent.

1980 ◽  
Vol 26 ◽  
pp. 411-501 ◽  

Leopold Ruzicka was born on 13 September 1887 in Vukovar, a small township in Slavonia—one of the provinces of the Austro-Hungarian monarchy. His father was of Czech* and Croat and his mother of Croat and Swabian extraction. All of his forebears were artisans and farmers; his father Stjepan was a cooper and an ardent Croatian patriot while his mother Amalija ( née Sever) leaned more towards her German background. Until his life’s end, Leopold never forgot his Croatian and those in the know had little difficulty in discerning here and there Croatian turns of phrase in his German speech. After he lost his father at the early age of four his mother took him and his younger brother Stjepan to live with relatives in the nearby larger town of Osijek. Here he received his early education, first at a primary school and then at the ‘Classical Gymnasium’. His youth was carefree and happy, thanks to his mother’s affectionate devotion and strict upbringing. He kept in life-long touch with some of his school comrades; they remembered him as introverted, quiet and phlegmatic—an impression which later aquaintances have found rather hard to believe. He was a good but not outstanding student, with an early leaning towards natural sciences in preference to history and philosophy. He was fond of playing chess (even during lessons); later on he gave up the game, considering it a waste of time. * The name Ruzicka is of Czech origin and is pronounced Rūzhitshka.


2018 ◽  
Vol 22 (5) ◽  
pp. 1123-1140 ◽  
Author(s):  
KAZUYA SAITO ◽  
HUI SUN ◽  
ADAM TIERNEY

The current study examines the role of cognitive and perceptual individual differences (i.e., aptitude) in second language (L2) pronunciation learning, when L2 learners’ varied experience background is controlled for. A total of 48 Chinese learners of English in the UK were assessed for their sensitivity to segmental and suprasegmental aspects of speech on explicit and implicit modes via behavioural (language/music aptitude tests) and neurophysiological (electroencephalography) measures. Subsequently, the participants’ aptitude profiles were compared to the segmental and suprasegmental dimensions of their L2 pronunciation proficiency analyzed through rater judgements and acoustic measurements. According to the results, the participants’ segmental attainment was associated not only with explicit aptitude (phonemic coding), but also with implicit aptitude (enhanced neural encoding of spectral peaks). Whereas the participants’ suprasegmental attainment was linked to explicit aptitude (rhythmic imagery) to some degree, it was primarily influenced by the quality and quantity of their most recent L2 learning experience.


Author(s):  
Mariya Dishkova ◽  
Rumyana Papancheva

This paper considers the problem of Internet and more general cyber addiction of primary school children. The aim is to investigate the level of dependency of young children in Internet, computer games and devices. The authors work is part of a project work researching digital skills and media-education at early age. A survey with 274 fourth grade students is described and analysed in the context of the tendency to meet and fall in love with the screen from a younger age. Young children do not recognise the eager to take some digital device at hand as a problem. They cannot really estimate the time spent on games or other online activities. Theoretical review of the problem is done, and the basic aspects of cyber addiction are mentioned. The authors’ point of view is that higher digital skills at early age could be a factor for avoiding higher cyber addiction of the children. Keywords: Cyber addiction, early age, digital skills, primary school, dependency.


2013 ◽  
Vol 40 (12) ◽  
pp. 2088-2096 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sheila T. Angeles-Han ◽  
Christina F. Pelajo ◽  
Larry B. Vogler ◽  
Kelly Rouster-Stevens ◽  
Christine Kennedy ◽  
...  

Objective.To characterize the epidemiology and clinical course of children with juvenile idiopathic arthritis-associated uveitis (JIA-U) in the Childhood Arthritis and Rheumatology Research Alliance (CARRA) Registry and explore differences between African American (AA) and non-Hispanic white (NHW) children.Methods.There were 4983 children with JIA enrolled in the CARRA Registry. Of those, 3967 NHW and AA children were included in this study. Demographic and disease-related data were collected from diagnosis to enrollment. Children with JIA were compared to those with JIA-U. Children with JIA-U were also compared by race.Results.There were 459/3967 children (11.6%) with JIA-U in our cohort with a mean age (SD) of 11.4 years (± 4.5) at enrollment. Compared to children with JIA, they were younger at arthritis onset, more likely to be female, had < 5 joints involved, had oligoarticular JIA, and were antinuclear antibody (ANA)-positive, rheumatoid factor (RF)-negative, and anticitrullinated protein antibody-negative. Predictors of uveitis development included female sex, early age of arthritis onset, and oligoarticular JIA. Polyarticular RF-positive JIA subtype was protective. Nearly 3% of children with JIA-U were AA. However, of the 220 AA children with JIA, 6% had uveitis; in contrast, 12% of the 3721 NHW children with JIA had uveitis.Conclusion.In the CARRA registry, the prevalence of JIA-U in AA and NHW children is 11.6%. We confirmed known uveitis risk markers (ANA positivity, younger age at arthritis onset, and oligoarticular JIA). We describe a decreased likelihood of uveitis in AA children and recommend further exploration of race as a risk factor in a larger population of AA children.


2021 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 28-35
Author(s):  
Robert Stanton ◽  
Stacie L Demel ◽  
Matthew L Flaherty ◽  
Eleni Antzoulatos ◽  
Lee A Gilkerson ◽  
...  

Introduction The risk of intracerebral haemorrhage (ICH) associated with hypertension (HTN) is well documented. While the prevalence of HTN increases with age, the greatest odds ratio (OR) for HTN as a risk for ischemic stroke is at an early age. We sought to evaluate if the risk for ICH from HTN was higher in the youngest patients of each race. Patients and methods The Ethnic/Racial Variations of ICH (ERICH) study is a prospective multicenter case-control study of ICH among whites, blacks, and Hispanics. Participants were divided into age groups based on race-specific quartiles. Cases in each race/age group were compared to controls using logistic regression (i.e., cases and controls unmatched). The probability of ICH among cases and controls for each race were compared against independent variables of HTN, quartile of age and interaction of quartile and age also using logistic regression. Results Overall, 2033 non-lobar ICH cases and 2060 controls, and 913 lobar ICH cases with 927 controls were included. ORs were highest in the youngest age quartile for non-lobar haemorrhage for blacks and Hispanics and highest in the youngest quartile for lobar haemorrhage for all races. The formal test of interaction between age and HTN was significant in all races for all locations with the exception of lobar ICH in whites (p = 0.2935). Discussion Hypertension is a strong independent risk factor for ICH irrespective of location among persons of younger age, consistent with the hypothesis that first exposure to HTN is a particularly sensitive time for all locations of ICH.


2016 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 90-92
Author(s):  
MM Rahman ◽  
MM Rahman ◽  
KN Sharmin ◽  
MM Hossain ◽  
MH Rashid ◽  
...  

The present study was designed to explore the patho-physiological investigation of anorexia of cattle at Sylhet district, Bangladesh. The aim of this study has been conducted to determine the patho-physiological causes of anorexia in cattle during the study period started from September to December in Bishwanath upazila veterinary hospital, Sylhet. Anorexia is one of the most common illness among female cattle in Bangladesh. In this study, a total number of 155 diseased cattle, 100 cattle were found having anorexia due to parasitic, infectious, nutritional deficiency and unknown etiology. Results of this study showed most anorexia developed due to parasitic infestation (41%) which was determined by feces examination and observing the body condition of the animal. The female cattle developed anorexia in higher rate (67%). The early age (less than 1year) of the cattle were found mostly to develop anorexia in cattle, may be due to parasitic and nutritional deficiencies cause.International Journal of Natural Sciences (2015), 5(2) 90-92


2017 ◽  
Vol 16 (3) ◽  
pp. 284-288
Author(s):  
Konstantinos Ravanis

The last twenty-five years have seen an increase in the development of an area of educational research and implementation which is known internationally as Early Childhood Science Education. In fact, this is a broad framework within which different theoretical trends coexist with corresponding research orientations and fields of teaching applications. These trends converge in an effort to study the mechanisms of initiation of children aged 4-8 years into the properties of the materials and objects and into the phenomena and concepts of Natural Sciences. When the first relevant efforts began to take shape, valid questions were raised as to whether the systematic approach to Natural Sciences at such an early age was desirable, possible and feasible.


2019 ◽  
Vol 67 (2) ◽  
pp. 193-213 ◽  
Author(s):  
Josef Hanson

This meta-analytic study examined the validity of Gordon’s music aptitude tests as predictors of other musical variables. The four tests analyzed were the Music Aptitude Profile (1965), Primary Measures of Music Audiation (1979), Intermediate Measures of Music Audiation (1982), and Advanced Measures of Music Audiation (1989). Separate analyses were performed for tonal, rhythm, and composite constructs of music aptitude. From 47 music education journal articles that met requirements for inclusion, 215 independent data points representing 6,086 participants were collapsed into an overriding set of five criterion categories: (a) aural perception, (b) achievement, (c) creativity, (d) affective outcomes, and (e) musical engagement. Moderators potentially affecting validity included audiation type, sampling method, grade level, criterion test type, and year of publication. Results revealed estimated true criterion-related validities of .45 (tonal), .46 (rhythm), and .53 (composite). Gordon’s music aptitude tests were consistently but not always strongly associated with many desirable musical outcomes. Analysis of correlations by subtest and criterion category produced mixed results, and high levels of between-study heterogeneity could not be explained through meta-regression moderator analysis.


1990 ◽  
Vol 157 (2) ◽  
pp. 265-268 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alistair Burns ◽  
Michael Farrell ◽  
Jeremy Christie Brown

Of 106 patients attending a gender-identity clinic, 73% satisfied DSM–III criteria for transsexualism. These DSM–III positives had a significantly younger age of onset and were less likely to experience sexual arousal with cross-dressing than those who did not satisfy DSM–III criteria. They were also significantly more likely to fulfil a definition of ‘core transsexualism’. ‘Core transsexualism’ may represent a subgroup within DSM–III criteria for transsexualism and its defining features in this study were an early age of onset, low sexual activity, lack of sexual arousal with cross-dressing and homosexual orientation. Of the whole sample, 23% were referred for gender reassignment surgery, of whom 100% were DSM–III positive and 60% were ‘core transsexuals'.


1967 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 53-60
Author(s):  
Doreen Bridges

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