Literature DB >> 23777481

Hemodynamic responses to speech and music in preverbal infants.

Eswen Fava1, Rachel Hull, Kyle Baumbauer, Heather Bortfeld.   

Abstract

Numerous studies have provided clues about the ontogeny of lateralization of auditory processing in humans, but most have employed specific subtypes of stimuli and/or have assessed responses in discrete temporal windows. The present study used near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) to establish changes in hemodynamic activity in the neocortex of preverbal infants (aged 4-11 months) while they were exposed to two distinct types of complex auditory stimuli (full sentences and musical phrases). Measurements were taken from bilateral temporal regions, including both anterior and posterior superior temporal gyri. When the infant sample was treated as a homogenous group, no significant effects emerged for stimulus type. However, when infants' hemodynamic responses were categorized according to their overall changes in volume, two very clear neurophysiological patterns emerged. A high-responder group showed a pattern of early and increasing activation, primarily in the left hemisphere, similar to that observed in comparable studies with adults. In contrast, a low-responder group showed a pattern of gradual decreases in activation over time. Although age did track with responder type, no significant differences between these groups emerged for stimulus type, suggesting that the high- versus low-responder characterization generalizes across classes of auditory stimuli. These results highlight a new way to conceptualize the variable cortical blood flow patterns that are frequently observed across infants and stimuli, with hemodynamic response volumes potentially serving as an early indicator of developmental changes in auditory-processing sensitivity.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Infants; Lateralization; Music; Near-infrared Spectroscopy; Speech

Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 23777481      PMCID: PMC3842366          DOI: 10.1080/09297049.2013.803524

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Child Neuropsychol        ISSN: 0929-7049            Impact factor:   2.500


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