Andrew Lawson to Intellectual Disability
This is a "connection" page, showing publications Andrew Lawson has written about Intellectual Disability.
Connection Strength
1.366
-
When are fetuses and young children most susceptible to soil metal concentrations of arsenic, lead and mercury? Spat Spatiotemporal Epidemiol. 2012 Sep; 3(3):265-72.
Score: 0.376
-
Women with and without intellectual disability and psychiatric disorders: an examination of the literature. J Intellect Disabil. 2008 Sep; 12(3):191-211.
Score: 0.290
-
Bayesian importance parameter modeling of misaligned predictors: soil metal measures related to residential history and intellectual disability in children. Environ Sci Pollut Res Int. 2014 Sep; 21(18):10775-86.
Score: 0.108
-
Are different soil metals near the homes of pregnant women associated with mild and severe intellectual disability in children? Dev Med Child Neurol. 2014 Sep; 56(9):888-97.
Score: 0.107
-
Probability of intellectual disability is associated with soil concentrations of arsenic and lead. Chemosphere. 2011 Jun; 84(1):31-8.
Score: 0.087
-
The relationship between mental retardation and developmental delays in children and the levels of arsenic, mercury and lead in soil samples taken near their mother's residence during pregnancy. Int J Hyg Environ Health. 2010 Mar; 213(2):116-23.
Score: 0.079
-
Are clusters of mental retardation correlated with clusters of developmental delay? Geospat Health. 2009 Nov; 4(1):17-26.
Score: 0.079
-
Soil metal concentrations and toxicity: associations with distances to industrial facilities and implications for human health. Sci Total Environ. 2009 Mar 15; 407(7):2216-23.
Score: 0.074
-
Metal concentrations in rural topsoil in South Carolina: potential for human health impact. Sci Total Environ. 2008 Sep 01; 402(2-3):149-56.
Score: 0.071
-
A spatial analysis of mental retardation of unknown cause and maternal residence during pregnancy. Geospat Health. 2008 May; 2(2):173-82.
Score: 0.071
-
A Bayesian semiparametric approach with change points for spatial ordinal data. Stat Methods Med Res. 2016 04; 25(2):644-58.
Score: 0.024