| Literature DB >> 29436854 |
Olena D Chorna1, Ellyn L Hamm1, Hemang Shrivastava1, Nathalie L Maitre1,2.
Abstract
Atypical maturation of auditory neural processing contributes to preterm-born infants' language delays. Event-related potential (ERP) measurement of speech-sound differentiation might fill a gap in treatment-response biomarkers to auditory interventions. We evaluated whether these markers could measure treatment effects in a quasi-randomized prospective study. Hospitalized preterm infants in passive or active, suck-contingent mother's voice exposure groups were not different at baseline. Post-intervention, the active group had greater increases in/du/-/gu/differentiation in left frontal and temporal regions. Infants with brain injury had lower baseline/ba/-/ga/and/du/-/gu/differentiation than those without. ERP provides valid discriminative, responsive, and predictive biomarkers of infant speech-sound differentiation.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29436854 PMCID: PMC6141308 DOI: 10.1080/87565641.2018.1433671
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dev Neuropsychol ISSN: 1532-6942 Impact factor: 2.253