FRY1 recently criticized the Tanner and Whitehouse (TW) method of assessing skeletal maturity2 on the grounds that it shows excessive fluctuation in the velocity of maturation. He stated that, in a child whose chronological age advances 6 months, the method may show no advance of skeletal age or, alternatively, a skeletal advance of 23 months. Fry seems to have assigned TW ratings only to the plates in the Greulich-Pyle Atlas, so it is not at all clear how he arrives at the criticism, nor, indeed, precisely what is implied. I am able, however, to supply actual data on the mean rate of maturation of a population of children and on the variation between individual children rated in successive years by the TW method. © 1969 Nature Publishing Group.
CITATION STYLE
Marshall, W. A. (1969). Individual variations in rate of skeletal maturation. Nature, 221(5175), 91. https://doi.org/10.1038/221091a0
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.