The age of the child is highly conjectural.Estimates vary between six months and eight years.If the "true"age is closer to the latter estimate,the variation between Homo erectus and Homo sapiens would be considerably less than the article suggests.
First, my apologies to Paul Trehin for not addressing his question about whether similar studies had been made on Neanderthal juveniles, but I've been vacationing in Wyoming for the past two weeks and really don't have an answer, anyway. Simply put, there aren't really very many samples of juvenile pre-modern humans to study, so, in any case even if there have been studies, I doubt if it has been possible to arrive at definitive conclusions.
Secondly, I've now had the chance to read the Coqueugniot et al. article in Nature, as well as to compare it to another related article in my files:
Anton, S. (1997). Developmental age and taxonomic affinity of the Mojokerto child, Java, Indonesia. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 102: 497-514.
As Robert Henvell says in the quote above, the estimated age at death for the Mojokerto child is the key to whether the pattern of relative brain growth resembles that of living apes and differs from that of modern humans. Coqueugnoit et al. seem to rely heavily on their measurement of the scanned image of the morphology of the Mojokerto subarcuate fossa (see Figure 2) to arrive at their age estimate of 0-1.5 years. However, Anton (1997), using several other criteria, arrived at an age estimate of 4-6 years for Mojokerto.
It seems to me, that using Anton's age estimate of 4-6 years for Mojokerto would reverse the conclusion arrived at by Coqueugniot et al., who estimate the age as ~1 year , but in my ignorance of juvenile human anatomical development I'm not about to jump in here and offer an armchair opinion as to which estimate is likely to be more accurate.
Dar