Our knowledge of infant perception and cognition is primarily based on habituation and dishabituation, but the underlying neural mechanisms for these processes per se remain unclear. It has been argued that habituation is related to building internal representations of repeated stimuli in the central nervous system, whereas dishabituation is related to an increased attention to novel items and events. This leads to a hypothesis that a distributed network including the sensory, association and prefrontal cortical regions of young infants is involved in those processes, in contrast with the classical developmental view that onset of the functioning of the prefrontal cortex is delayed. Here we examined the time evolution of spatio-temporal hem...
Initially, infants are capable of discriminating phonetic contrasts across the world’s languages. St...
Initially, infants are capable of discriminating phonetic contrasts across the world's languages. St...
How specialized is the infant brain for processing voice within our environment? Research in adults ...
Classic views of multisensory processing suggest that cortical sensory regions are specialized. More...
It has long been thought that the prefrontal cortex, as the seat of most higher brain functions, is ...
How does the developing brain respond to recent experience? Repetition suppression (RS) is a robust ...
Perception and cognition in infants have been traditionally investigated using habituation paradigms...
How specialized is the infant brain for perceiving the facial and manual movements displayed by othe...
Numerous studies have provided clues about the ontogeny of lateralization of auditory processing in ...
Infants are responsive to and show a preference for human vocalizations from very early in developme...
Recent research indicates that adults and infants spontaneously create and generalize hierarchical r...
My dissertation research focused on uncovering the functional organization of higher-level perceptua...
Functional neuroimaging has been used to show that the developing auditory cortex of very young huma...
A precondition for successful communication between people is the detection of signals indicating th...
Despite increasing interest in the development of audiovisual speech perception in infancy, the unde...
Initially, infants are capable of discriminating phonetic contrasts across the world’s languages. St...
Initially, infants are capable of discriminating phonetic contrasts across the world's languages. St...
How specialized is the infant brain for processing voice within our environment? Research in adults ...
Classic views of multisensory processing suggest that cortical sensory regions are specialized. More...
It has long been thought that the prefrontal cortex, as the seat of most higher brain functions, is ...
How does the developing brain respond to recent experience? Repetition suppression (RS) is a robust ...
Perception and cognition in infants have been traditionally investigated using habituation paradigms...
How specialized is the infant brain for perceiving the facial and manual movements displayed by othe...
Numerous studies have provided clues about the ontogeny of lateralization of auditory processing in ...
Infants are responsive to and show a preference for human vocalizations from very early in developme...
Recent research indicates that adults and infants spontaneously create and generalize hierarchical r...
My dissertation research focused on uncovering the functional organization of higher-level perceptua...
Functional neuroimaging has been used to show that the developing auditory cortex of very young huma...
A precondition for successful communication between people is the detection of signals indicating th...
Despite increasing interest in the development of audiovisual speech perception in infancy, the unde...
Initially, infants are capable of discriminating phonetic contrasts across the world’s languages. St...
Initially, infants are capable of discriminating phonetic contrasts across the world's languages. St...
How specialized is the infant brain for processing voice within our environment? Research in adults ...