6.1 Comparing child development across studies

Figure 6.1: D-score distributions by study. Click ZOOM to enlarge the image.

Figure 6.1 shows the scatterplot of the D-score by age separately for each cohort. Remember from section 2.1 that each study selected its own set of instruments to collect the data. The scatterplots demonstrate a significant advance made possible by the D-score: We can plot the developmental scores of children from different cohorts, with different ages, using different instruments, on the same vertical axis.

The five blue lines guide the eye. These lines indicate the locations of the -2SD, -1SD, 0SD, +1SD and +2SD quantiles at each age in the combined data. Section I:5.4 motivates the idea and provides some technical details. We’ll come back to these lines in section 7.2.

By and large, the data in every study follow the blue lines. Perhaps the most obvious exception is the GCDG-JAM-STUNTED cohort, where older children somewhat exceed the D-score range. It is unknown whether this is real, or due to a weak calibration of the instrument.

Replacing the D-score by the DAZ emphasises any differences both within and between studies.

[Include DAZ plot here]