Infant ERP amplitudes change over the course of an experimental session: Implications for cognitive processes and methodology

Abstract Event-related Potentials (ERP) studies are a widely used methodology to investigate the early cognitive development in infants of all age ranges. We examined changes in amplitude contribution in a set of previously published data (see [4] ) in relation to the Negative component as a functio...

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Veröffentlicht in:Brain & development (Tokyo. 1979) 2011-08, Vol.33 (7), p.558-568
Hauptverfasser: Stets, Manuela, Reid, Vincent M
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creator Stets, Manuela
Reid, Vincent M
description Abstract Event-related Potentials (ERP) studies are a widely used methodology to investigate the early cognitive development in infants of all age ranges. We examined changes in amplitude contribution in a set of previously published data (see [4] ) in relation to the Negative component as a function of number of trials contributing to each individual average and with time as a co-variate to that contribution. With only seven trials contributing to each individual’s average the Nc for the object-directed condition was significantly more negative than the one for the averted-gaze condition, which is the opposite of the effect reported in Hoehl et al. [4] . The analysis including time as a co-variate revealed that the effect did not alter according to the amount of time taken during the experiment to collect each trial, suggesting that data of the quality needed to contribute to the ERP is itself a measure of time varying components of the experimental session. We conclude that infants initially allocate more attentional resources to object-directed gaze. This suggests that the temporal dynamics of infant ERP violates assumptions present in adult ERP, and that differences between conditions in relatively few trials inform us of cognitive capacities during infancy.
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source MEDLINE; Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Adult
Age
Attention
Cognition - physiology
Cognitive ability
Data processing
ERP
ERP methodologies
Event-related potentials
Evoked Potentials - physiology
Eye gaze
Fixation, Ocular
Humans
Infant
Infants
Mental Processes - physiology
Neurology
Research Design
Signal-to-noise ratio
Time Factors
title Infant ERP amplitudes change over the course of an experimental session: Implications for cognitive processes and methodology
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