| Literature DB >> 26855858 |
Ao Chen1, Varghese Peter2, Denis Burnham2.
Abstract
Background. Auditory Event-Related Potentials (ERPs) are useful for understanding early auditory development among infants, as it allows the collection of a relatively large amount of data in a short time. So far, studies that have investigated development in auditory ERPs in infancy have mainly used single sounds as stimuli. Yet in real life, infants must decode successive rather than single acoustic events. In the present study, we tested 4-, 8-, and 12-month-old infants' auditory ERPs to musical melodies comprising three piano notes, and examined ERPs to each individual note in the melody. Methods. Infants were presented with 360 repetitions of a three-note melody while EEG was recorded from 128 channels on the scalp through a Geodesic Sensor Net. For each infant, both latency and amplitude of auditory components P1 and N2 were measured from averaged ERPs for each individual note. Results. Analysis was restricted to response collected at frontal central site. For all three notes, there was an overall reduction in latency for both P1 and N2 over age. For P1, latency reduction was significant from 4 to 8 months, but not from 8 to 12 months. N2 latency, on the other hand, decreased significantly from 4 to 8 to 12 months. With regard to amplitude, no significant change was found for either P1 or N2. Nevertheless, the waveforms of the three age groups were qualitatively different: for the 4-month-olds, the P1-N2 deflection was attenuated for the second and the third notes; for the 8-month-olds, such attenuation was observed only for the middle note; for the 12-month-olds, the P1 and N2 peaks show relatively equivalent amplitude and peak width across all three notes. Conclusion. Our findings indicate that the infant brain is able to register successive acoustic events in a stream, and ERPs become better time-locked to each composite event over age. Younger infants may have difficulties in responding to late occurring events in a stream, and the onset response to the late events may overlap with the incomplete response to preceding events.Entities:
Keywords: Auditory ERP; Development; Infant; Successive stimuli
Year: 2016 PMID: 26855858 PMCID: PMC4741073 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.1580
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Figure 1The 25 channels used for artifact reduction (the area circumscribed by the bow-tie shape) and the three channels averaged for representing response at FC (circumscribed by the triangle shape).
Figure 2Grand average responses of the three age groups.
The vertical axis indicates the onset of the melody, and the vertical dotted lines indicate the onsets of the second and the third note.
Mean P1 and N2 latency of each note with regard to the onset of the melody separated by age groups. Standard deviations are given in parentheses.
| ERP peaks | 1st note | 2nd note | 3rd note |
|---|---|---|---|
| 4 m P1 | 195.78 (16.49) | 375.55 (20.86) | 648.89 (18.59) |
| 4 m N2 | 288.44 (17.35) | 532.89 (19.43) | 722.89 (19.30) |
| 8 m P1 | 169.41 (13.34) | 325.88 (20.84) | 587.76 (17.00) |
| 8 m N2 | 268.94 (20.76) | 470.12 (18.72) | 732.00 (17.83) |
| 12 m P1 | 162.12 (16.68) | 339.53 (16.36) | 581.65 (12.50) |
| 12 m N2 | 250.12 (19.60) | 439.76 (19.60) | 712.14 (17.41) |
Effects of age for P1 and N2 latency measurements for each note.
| Effect of age | Post-hoc test | |
|---|---|---|
| 1st note P1 | F(2, 49) = 22.72, p < 0.01 | 4 m v.s. 8 m, p < 0.01 |
| 4 m v.s. 12 m, p < 0.01 | ||
| 8 m v.s. 12 m, n.s. | ||
| 1st note N2 | F(2, 49) = 17.33, p < 0.01 | 4 m v.s. 8 m, p < 0.05 |
| 4 m v.s. 12 m, p < 0.01 | ||
| 8 m v.s. 12 m, p < 0.05 | ||
| 2nd note P1 | F(2,49) = 30.2, p < 0.01 | 4 m v.s. 8 m, p < 0.01 |
| 4 m v.s. 12 m, p < 0.01 | ||
| 8 m v.s. 12 m, n.s. | ||
| 2nd note N2 | F(2, 49) = 117.92, p < 0.01 | 4 m v.s. 8 m, p < 0.01 |
| 4 m v.s. 12 m, p < 0.01 | ||
| 8 m v.s. 12 m, p < 0.01 | ||
| 3rd note P1 | F(2, 49) = 92.08, p < 0.01 | 4 m v.s. 8 m, p < 0.01 |
| 4 m v.s. 12 m, p < 0.01 | ||
| 8 m v.s. 12 m, n.s. | ||
| 3rd note N2 | F(2, 49) = 5.01, p < 0.05 | 4 m v.s. 8 m, n.s. |
| 4 m v.s. 12 m, n.s. | ||
| 8 m v.s. 12 m, p < 0.01 |
Figure 3Mean P1 and N2 latency with regard to each note’s onset of the three age groups.
Error bars represent standard errors.
Mean P1 and N2 amplitude (in µV) of each note of each age group.
Standard deviations are given in parenthesis.
| 1st note | 2nd note | 3rd note | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 4 m P1 | 4.09 (2.23) | 3.37 (2.56) | 2.77 (2.18) |
| N2 | 1.96 (2.34) | 1.50 (1.86) | 1.81 (1.99) |
| 8 m P1 | 3.26 (2.36) | 1.99 (2.81) | 2.78 (1.99) |
| N2 | 1.76 (2.15) | 0.51 (2.09) | 1.00 (1.76) |
| 12 m P1 | 3.53 (1.45) | 2.59 (1.67) | 2.70 (2.07) |
| N2 | 1.20 (1.47) | 0.09 (1.72) | 0.81 (2.71) |
Figure 4Mean P1 and N2 amplitude of each note of each age group.
Error bars represent standard errors.