Literature DB >> 19635084

Electrophysiological responses to auditory novelty in temperamentally different 9-month-old infants.

Peter J Marshall1, Bethany C Reeb, Nathan A Fox.   

Abstract

Behavioral reactivity to novel stimuli in the first half-year of life has been identified as a key aspect of early temperament and a significant precursor of approach and withdrawal tendencies to novelty in later infancy and early childhood. The current study examines the neural signatures of reactivity to novel auditory stimuli in 9-month-old infants in relation to prior temperamental reactivity. On the basis of the assessment of behavioral reactivity scores at 4 months of age, infants were classified into groups of high negatively reactive and high positively reactive infants. Along with an unselected control group, these groups of temperamentally different infants were given a three-stimulus auditory oddball task at 9 months of age which employed frequent standard and infrequent deviant tones as well as a set of complex novel sounds. In comparison to high positively reactive and control infants, high negatively reactive infants displayed increased amplitude of a positive slow wave in the ERP response to deviant tones compared to standard tones. In contrast, high positively reactive infants showed a larger novelty P3 to the complex novel sounds. Results are discussed in terms of optimal levels of novelty for temperamentally different infants.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19635084      PMCID: PMC2718772          DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-7687.2008.00808.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Dev Sci        ISSN: 1363-755X


  42 in total

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Review 10.  Using mismatch negativity to study central auditory processing in developmental language and literacy impairments: where are we, and where should we be going?

Authors:  D V M Bishop
Journal:  Psychol Bull       Date:  2007-07       Impact factor: 17.737

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  26 in total

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Review 4.  Behavioral inhibition and developmental risk: a dual-processing perspective.

Authors:  Heather A Henderson; Daniel S Pine; Nathan A Fox
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Review 5.  The nature of individual differences in inhibited temperament and risk for psychiatric disease: A review and meta-analysis.

Authors:  J A Clauss; S N Avery; J U Blackford
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6.  Lasting associations between early-childhood temperament and late-adolescent reward-circuitry response to peer feedback.

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7.  Attention biases to threat link behavioral inhibition to social withdrawal over time in very young children.

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8.  Attention to novelty in behaviorally inhibited adolescents moderates risk for anxiety.

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10.  Developmental consequences of behavioral inhibition: a model in rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta).

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