4.5 Article

Functional connectivity during language processing in 3-month-old infants at familial risk for autism spectrum disorder

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 53, Issue 5, Pages 1621-1637

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ejn.15005

Keywords

alpha coherence; auditory statistical learning; autism; electroencephalography; theta coherence

Categories

Funding

  1. Achievement Rewards for College Scientists Foundation
  2. National Institute of Child Health and Human Development [P50 HD055784-08]
  3. Autism Speaks
  4. David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles
  5. National Institute of General Medical Sciences [R01 GM111378-01A1, T32 GM008042]

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The study suggests that connectivity measured through EEG during ASL at 3 months may predict the later onset of autism spectrum disorder symptoms at 18 months. Additionally, the alpha coherence at 3 months correlates positively with word production at 18 months, indicating that early alterations in connectivity may serve as markers for predicting neurodevelopmental outcomes in infants.
Auditory statistical learning (ASL) plays a role in language development and may lay a foundation for later social communication impairment. As part of a longitudinal study of infant siblings, we asked whether electroencephalography (EEG) measures of connectivity during ASL at 3 months of age-differentiated infants who showed signs of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) at age 18 months. We measured spectral power and phase coherence in the theta (4-6 Hz) and alpha (6-12 Hz) frequency bands within putative language networks. Infants were divided into ASD-concern (n = 14) and No-ASD-concern (n = 49) outcome groups based on their ASD symptoms at 18 months, measured using the Autism Diagnostic Observation Scale Toddler Module. Using permutation testing, we identified a trend toward reduced left fronto-central phase coherence at the electrode pair F9-C3 in both theta and alpha frequency bands in infants who later showed ASD symptoms at 18 months. Across outcome groups, alpha coherence at 3 months correlated with greater word production at 18 months on the MacArthur-Bates Communicative Development Inventory. This study introduces signal processing and analytic tools that account for the challenges inherent in infant EEG studies, such as short duration of recordings, considerable movement artifact, and variable volume conduction. Our results indicate that connectivity, as measured by phase coherence during 2.5 min of ASL, can be quantified as early as 3 months and suggest that early alternations in connectivity may serve as markers of resilience for neurodevelopmental impairments.

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