4.5 Review

Rhythmic visual stimulation as a window into early brain development: A systematic review

相关参考文献

注意:仅列出部分参考文献,下载原文获取全部文献信息。
Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

Supramodality of neural entrainment: Rhythmic visual stimulation causally enhances auditory working memory performance

Philippe Albouy et al.

Summary: This study investigates the involvement of the frontoparietal network in different cognitive processes and reveals that rhythmic visual stimulation affects the connectivity of this network and modulates working memory performance.

SCIENCE ADVANCES (2022)

Review Neurosciences

Forgotten rhythms? Revisiting the first evidence for rhythms in cognition

Cliodhna Quigley

Summary: This passage discusses the history of human brain rhythms recorded by Hans Berger in the 1920s, and the continued investigation and importance of these alpha rhythms. It also mentions the early experiments and findings in EEG research, as well as the lessons they provide for contemporary neuroscientists.

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE (2022)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

Brain charts for the human lifespan

R. A. I. Bethlehem et al.

Summary: Neuroimaging has become a widely used tool in brain research, but there is currently a lack of reference standards to quantify individual differences over time. In this study, researchers created an open resource that benchmarks brain morphology using a large dataset of MRI scans. The brain charts identified neurodevelopmental milestones and showed high individual stability and robustness to technical and methodological differences.

NATURE (2022)

Article Psychology, Developmental

The FreqTag toolbox: A principled approach to analyzing electrophysiological time series in frequency tagging paradigms

Jessica Sanches Braga Figueira et al.

Summary: ssVEP frequency tagging is a method increasingly used in electrophysiological studies of visual attention and perception, suitable for studying various populations. Specific signal processing methods are necessary for leveraging the strength of this method.

DEVELOPMENTAL COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE (2022)

Article Psychology, Developmental

Time-frequency analysis methods and their application in developmental EEG data

Santiago Morales et al.

Summary: This article highlights the importance and application of time-frequency analysis in developmental research. Traditional methods of EEG analysis have limitations, while time-frequency analysis can provide a more comprehensive understanding of oscillations in EEG signals and capture processes not observed by other analysis methods.

DEVELOPMENTAL COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE (2022)

Article Clinical Neurology

Steady-state visual evoked potentials in children with neurofibromatosis type 1: associations with behavioral rating scales and impact of psychostimulant medication

Eve Lalancette et al.

Summary: This study investigated the neural activity in the occipital cortex of children with neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) using steady-state visual evoked potentials (SSVEPs). The results showed a reduced signal-to-noise ratios of SSVEP responses in children with NF1, which were negatively correlated with symptoms of inattention and emotional/behavioral problems. The intake of psychostimulant medication improved the SSVEP response at the lowest stimulation frequency (6 Hz).

JOURNAL OF NEURODEVELOPMENTAL DISORDERS (2022)

Article Neurosciences

The power of rhythms: how steady-state evoked responses reveal early neurocognitive development

Claire Kabdebon et al.

Summary: Electroencephalography (EEG) is a non-invasive and painless method for recording cerebral activity, especially suitable for studying infants. The analysis of steady-state evoked potentials (SS-EPs) provides objective and predictive results, robust to artifacts, and allows for short and efficient recordings. It can creatively target a wide range of cognitive and neural processes, making it increasingly important in the understanding of early cognitive processes.

NEUROIMAGE (2022)

Article Psychology, Multidisciplinary

Frequency tagging with infants: The visual oddball paradigm

Stefanie Peykarjou

Summary: Combining frequency tagging with EEG has been increasingly used as a powerful tool in developmental research and cognitive neuroscience. However, EEG research with infants faces challenges such as attentional capacity limits, variation in looking times, and presence of artefacts in the EEG signal. This manuscript systematically reviews frequency tagging studies and re-analyzes data from seven-month-old infants, providing recommendations for appropriate stimulation and analysis strategies for infant frequency tagging studies in the future.

FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY (2022)

Review Neurosciences

Rhythms of human attention and memory: An embedded process perspective

Moritz Koester et al.

Summary: It is commonly believed in cognitive neuroscience that human attention and memory should be considered as separate modules and processes. However, this study proposes that brain rhythms provide evidence for the embedded nature of these processes in the human brain. Specifically, gamma oscillations (30-90 Hz) are found to reflect sensory information processing and activated neural representations, while theta rhythm (3-8 Hz) plays a role in explicit control processes and structuring neural information processing. Additionally, reduced alpha oscillations (8-14 Hz) are associated with activated semantic networks involved in explicit and implicit mnemonic processes. These findings contribute to our understanding of the integrated nature of attention and memory.

FRONTIERS IN HUMAN NEUROSCIENCE (2022)

Article Neurosciences

Challenges and new perspectives of developmental cognitive EEG studies

Estelle Herve et al.

Summary: This paper provides an overview of early cognitive developmental EEG studies, emphasizing the importance of considering the specificities of EEG technology in young participants, and summarizing the most representative results obtained in the time and time-frequency domains while introducing recent standardized pipelines that can promote replicability and comparability across experiments and ages.

NEUROIMAGE (2022)

Article Neurosciences

A neural marker of rapid discrimination of facial expression in 3.5-and 7-month-old infants

Fanny Poncet et al.

Summary: This study investigated the development of facial expression discrimination in infants using fast periodic visual stimulation and scalp electroencephalography. The results showed that both 3.5-month-olds and 7-month-olds were able to discriminate between expressions of disgust, happiness, and neutrality. Furthermore, the brain responses and activity patterns differed between different expressions and age groups.

FRONTIERS IN NEUROSCIENCE (2022)

Review Ophthalmology

VEP estimation of visual acuity: a systematic review

Ruth Hamilton et al.

Summary: VEP SF limit is a valuable tool for objectively assessing visual acuity, especially in pre-verbal children or patients who cannot reliably measure behavioral acuity. The relationship between VEP SF limit and behavioral acuity is influenced by the choice of stimulus and acuity test.

DOCUMENTA OPHTHALMOLOGICA (2021)

Article Chemistry, Analytical

Evaluating the Effect of Stimuli Color and Frequency on SSVEP

Xavier Duart et al.

Summary: The study compared white, red, and green flashing stimuli at three frequencies (5, 12, and 30 Hz) to find that the middle frequency generated the best SNR. White showed as good an SNR as red at 12 Hz, and green at 5 Hz. There was a correlation between attention and SNR at low frequency.

SENSORS (2021)

Article Psychology, Developmental

Enhancing reproducibility in developmental EEG research: BIDS cluster-based permutation tests, and effect sizes

Marlene Meyer et al.

Summary: The article discusses methodological approaches to maximize the reproducibility of developmental EEG research, including transforming data into standardized structures like BIDS and using cluster-based permutation testing to analyze and report results.

DEVELOPMENTAL COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE (2021)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

Odor-driven face-like categorization in the human infant brain

Diane Rekow et al.

Summary: Understanding how the young infant brain categorizes sensory inputs from the environment, researchers found that non-visual cues, such as odors, play a key role in shaping the interpretation of face-like configurations as faces. The study reveals that early multisensory inputs, especially olfactory cues, play a significant role in the development of face-selective activity in the infant brain.

PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA (2021)

Article Biochemistry & Molecular Biology

Neural oscillations are a start toward understanding brain activity rather than the end

Keith B. Doelling et al.

Summary: The debate discussed whether rhythmic neural activity in the brain merely reflects environmental rhythmic features or a fundamental computational mechanism. The field has been hindered by oscillator predictions based on intuition rather than biophysical models compatible with observed phenomena. It is suggested to ground hypotheses in well-developed theories of oscillatory behavior and focus less on the vague question of oscillation, but rather on specific biophysical models that can be readily tested.

PLOS BIOLOGY (2021)

Article Behavioral Sciences

Remarks on the analysis of steady-state responses: Spurious artifacts introduced by overlapping epochs

Lucas Benjamin et al.

Summary: This commentary discusses the quantification of neural entrainment, pointing out limitations in previous research methods and proposing alternative measures. Experimental results on simulated datasets showed that the original overlapping epochs method inevitably leads to methodological artifacts, and is not recommended.

CORTEX (2021)

Article Behavioral Sciences

Optimizing steady-state responses to index statistical learning: Response to Benjamin and colleagues

Laura J. Batterink et al.

Summary: Neural entrainment refers to the alignment of neural activity with rhythmic stimuli. A study compared methodological approaches for studying neural entrainment, finding that overlapping epochs can lead to inflated estimates of entrainment. While overlapping epochs should generally be avoided in classic analyses, they may be beneficial for fine-grained analyses of neural entrainment over time.

CORTEX (2021)

Article Neurosciences

Resting State EEG Related to Mathematical Improvement After Spatial Training in Children

Da-Wei Zhang et al.

Summary: This study investigated the effects of mental rotation and visuo-spatial working memory training combined with number line training on mathematical performance in 6-7 year old children. Both training groups showed improvement in mathematics, with cognitive improvement specific to the training. Changes in fronto-parietal coherence were found to be related to an increase in mathematical performance, suggesting it could be a useful measure in further studies of mathematical interventions in children.

FRONTIERS IN HUMAN NEUROSCIENCE (2021)

Article Neurosciences

Young infants process prediction errors at the theta rhythm

Moritz Koester et al.

Summary: Research findings suggest that 9-month-old infants show a pronounced response in the ongoing 4-5 Hz theta rhythm during the processing of unexpected events, while their event-related activity to unexpected events in the negative central (Nc) component is not related to the theta rhythm. These results provide critical evidence that the theta rhythm is involved in processing prediction errors in early human brain development.

NEUROIMAGE (2021)

Article Neurosciences

Varying Stimulus Duration Reveals Consistent Neural Activity and Behavior for Human Face Individuation

Talia L. Retter et al.

Summary: The study investigated the relationship between neural activity and behavioral performance in visual discrimination of complex images, finding that the optimal neural face individuation response emerged at 50 ms and 170 ms stimulus durations. Behavioral accuracy correlated with neural response amplitude in the 50-125 ms range, suggesting predictive value of early neural responses in predicting performance differences.

NEUROSCIENCE (2021)

Article Psychology, Developmental

The development of theta and alpha neural oscillations from ages 3 to 24 years

Dillan Cellier et al.

Summary: This study investigated the development of theta and alpha oscillations from early childhood to adulthood, finding that theta oscillations dominate in posterior electrodes in early childhood while the peak frequency of alpha oscillations increases between ages 7 and 24. Additionally, there was a topographical transition of theta oscillations from dominance in posterior electrodes in early childhood to anterior electrodes in adulthood.

DEVELOPMENTAL COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE (2021)

Article Psychology, Developmental

Atypical Topographical Organization of Global Form and Motion Processing in 5-Month-Old Infants at Risk for Autism

Par Nystrom et al.

Summary: Research indicates individuals with ASD excel in local processing but struggle with integrating local features into global percepts. By comparing infants at risk for ASD to typically developing infants using SSVEP at 5 months old, different topographical organizations for global form and motion processing were observed. However, activation patterns for local visual change were surprisingly similar between the two groups, suggesting that perceptual abnormalities may contribute to the developmental pathways of ASD.

JOURNAL OF AUTISM AND DEVELOPMENTAL DISORDERS (2021)

Article Clinical Neurology

Use of complex visual stimuli allows controlled recruitment of cortical networks in infants

Eero Ahtola et al.

CLINICAL NEUROPHYSIOLOGY (2020)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

Snakes elicit specific neural responses in the human infant brain

J. Bertels et al.

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS (2020)

Article Biochemistry & Molecular Biology

Visual Imagery and Perception Share Neural Representations in the Alpha Frequency Band

Siying Xie et al.

CURRENT BIOLOGY (2020)

Article Psychology, Biological

Specification curve analysis

Uri Simonsohn et al.

NATURE HUMAN BEHAVIOUR (2020)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

Re-imagining fMRI for awake behaving infants

C. T. Ellis et al.

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS (2020)

Article Psychology, Developmental

The rhythm of learning: Theta oscillations as an index of active learning in infancy

Katarina Begus et al.

DEVELOPMENTAL COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE (2020)

Article Psychology, Developmental

Maternal odor shapes rapid face categorization in the infant brain

Arnaud Leleu et al.

DEVELOPMENTAL SCIENCE (2020)

Article Psychology, Multidisciplinary

Impact of Learning to Read in a Mixed Approach on Neural Tuning to Words in Beginning Readers

Alice van de Walle de Ghelcke et al.

FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY (2020)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

Symbolic labeling in 5-month-old human infants

Claire Kabdebon et al.

PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA (2019)

Review Neurosciences

Modulating Human Memory via Entrainment of Brain Oscillations

Simon Hanslmayr et al.

TRENDS IN NEUROSCIENCES (2019)

Review Behavioral Sciences

Neural Entrainment and Attentional Selection in the Listening Brain

Jonas Obleser et al.

TRENDS IN COGNITIVE SCIENCES (2019)

Article Psychology, Educational

Lateralized Neural Responses to Letters and Digits in First Graders

Aliette Lochy et al.

CHILD DEVELOPMENT (2019)

Article Psychology, Multidisciplinary

Visually Entrained Theta Oscillations Increase for Unexpected Events in the Infant Brain

Moritz Koester et al.

PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE (2019)

Article Psychology, Developmental

Overt and Covert Attention in Infants Revealed Using Steady-State Visually Evoked Potentials

Joan Christodoulou et al.

DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY (2018)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

Rapid Categorization of Human and Ape Faces in 9-Month-Old Infants Revealed by Fast Periodic Visual Stimulation

Stefanie Peykarjou et al.

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS (2017)

Article Biochemistry & Molecular Biology

Theta Phase Synchronization Is the Glue that Binds Human Associative Memory

Andrew Clouter et al.

CURRENT BIOLOGY (2017)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

Left cortical specialization for visual letter strings predicts rudimentary knowledge of letter-sound association in preschoolers

Aliette Lochy et al.

PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA (2016)

Article Mathematical & Computational Biology

Nonlinear Origin of SSVEP Spectra-A Combined Experimental and Modeling Study

Maciej Labecki et al.

FRONTIERS IN COMPUTATIONAL NEUROSCIENCE (2016)

Article Neurosciences

Measuring Neural Entrainment to Beat and Meter in Infants: Effects of Music Background

Laura K. Cirelli et al.

FRONTIERS IN NEUROSCIENCE (2016)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

Children's Brain Responses to Optic Flow Vary by Pattern Type and Motion Speed

Rick O. Gilmore et al.

PLOS ONE (2016)

Article Ophthalmology

The steady-state visual evoked potential in vision research: A review

Anthony M. Norcia et al.

JOURNAL OF VISION (2015)

Review Behavioral Sciences

Frontal theta as a mechanism for cognitive control

James F. Cavanagh et al.

TRENDS IN COGNITIVE SCIENCES (2014)

Article Psychology, Developmental

The Utility of EEG Band Power Analysis in the Study of Infancy and Early Childhood

Joni N. Saby et al.

DEVELOPMENTAL NEUROPSYCHOLOGY (2012)

Article Psychology, Developmental

Recording Infant ERP Data for Cognitive Research

Stefanie Hoehl et al.

DEVELOPMENTAL NEUROPSYCHOLOGY (2012)

Article Ophthalmology

Piecing it together: Infants' neural responses to face and object structure

Faraz Farzin et al.

JOURNAL OF VISION (2012)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

Attentional dynamics of infant visual foraging

Steven S. Robertson et al.

PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA (2012)

Article Psychology, Developmental

Parallels in Stimulus-Driven Oscillatory Brain Responses to Numerosity Changes in Adults and Seven-Month-Old Infants

Melissa E. Libertus et al.

DEVELOPMENTAL NEUROPSYCHOLOGY (2011)

Article Neurosciences

Orientation tuning in the visual cortex of 3-month-old human infants

Thomas J. Baker et al.

VISION RESEARCH (2011)

Article Biochemistry & Molecular Biology

Reorganization of Global Form and Motion Processing during Human Visual Development

John Wattam-Bell et al.

CURRENT BIOLOGY (2010)

Article Psychology, Biological

Maturational changes of 5 Hz SSVEPs elicited by intermittent photic stimulation

Ala Birca et al.

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY (2010)

Review Behavioral Sciences

Illuminating the developing brain: The past, present and future of functional near infrared spectroscopy

S. Lloyd-Fox et al.

NEUROSCIENCE AND BIOBEHAVIORAL REVIEWS (2010)

Review Neurosciences

Steady-state visually evoked potentials: Focus on essential paradigms and future perspectives

Francois-Benoit Vialatte et al.

PROGRESS IN NEUROBIOLOGY (2010)

Article Psychology, Developmental

Asymmetrical cortical processing of radial expansion/contraction in infants and adults

Nobu Shirai et al.

DEVELOPMENTAL SCIENCE (2009)

Review Ophthalmology

The technique, validity and clinical use of the sweep VEP

Fahad Almoqbel et al.

OPHTHALMIC AND PHYSIOLOGICAL OPTICS (2008)

Article Neurosciences

Spatiotemporal analysis of the cortical sources of the steady-state visual evoked potential

Francesco Di Russo et al.

HUMAN BRAIN MAPPING (2007)

Article Psychology, Developmental

Electrophysiological evaluation of human brain development

Terence W. Picton et al.

DEVELOPMENTAL NEUROPSYCHOLOGY (2007)

Article Neurosciences

Motion- and orientation-specific cortical responses in infancy

O Braddick et al.

VISION RESEARCH (2005)

Article Ophthalmology

Faster and more sensitive VEP recording in children

AM Mackay et al.

DOCUMENTA OPHTHALMOLOGICA (2003)

Article Neurosciences

FPL and sweep VEP to tritan stimuli in young human infants

CM Suttle et al.

VISION RESEARCH (2002)

Article Neurosciences

Normalization models applied to orientation masking in the human infant

TR Candy et al.

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE (2001)

Article Neurosciences

Directional motion asymmetry in infant VEPs - which direction?

AJS Mason et al.

VISION RESEARCH (2001)