Attention affects the recognition of briefly presented visual stimuli in infants: an ERP study.

This study examined the effect of attention in infants on the ERP changes occurring during the recognition of briefly presented visual stimuli. Infants at ages 4.5, 6 and 7.5 months were presented with a Sesame Street movie that elicited periods of attention and inattention, and computer-generated stimuli were presented overlaid on the movie for 500 ms. One stimulus was familiar to the infants and was presented frequently, a second stimulus was familiar but presented infrequently, and a set of 14 novel stimuli were presented infrequently. An ERP component labeled the 'Nc' (Negative Central, about 450-550 ms after stimulus onset) was larger during attention than inattention and increased in magnitude over the three testing ages during attention. Late slow waves in the ERP (from 1000 to 2000 ms post-stimulus onset) consisted of a positive slow wave in response to the infrequent familiar stimulus at all three testing ages. The late slow wave in response to the infrequent novel stimulus during attention was a positive slow wave for the 4.5-month-old infants, to a positive-negative slow wave for the 6-month-old infants and a negative slow wave for the 7.5-month-old infants. These results show attention facilitates the brain response during infant recognition memory and show that developmental changes in recognition memory are closely related to changes in attention.

[1]  O. Pascalis,et al.  Long-term recognition memory for faces assessed by visual paired comparison in 3- and 6-month-old infants. , 1998, Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition.

[2]  John E. Richards,et al.  Individual Differences in Infants' Recognition of Briefly Presented Visual Stimuli. , 1998, Infancy : the official journal of the International Society on Infant Studies.

[3]  F. Perrin,et al.  Spherical splines for scalp potential and current density mapping. , 1989, Electroencephalography and clinical neurophysiology.

[4]  S. R. Searle Linear Models , 1971 .

[5]  JohnE. Richards AbstractDevelopment of sustained visual attention in infant , 1991 .

[6]  H. Keselman,et al.  Comparing repeated measures means in factorial designs. , 1988, Psychophysiology.

[7]  C. C. Wood,et al.  The ɛ-Adjustment Procedure for Repeated-Measures Analyses of Variance , 1976 .

[8]  Nunez Pl,et al.  Localization of brain activity with electroencephalography. , 1990 .

[9]  C. Nelson,et al.  Neural correlates of attention and memory in the first year of life , 1992 .

[10]  J. Rohrbaugh,et al.  Current trends in event-related potential research , 1987 .

[11]  C. Nelson,et al.  Recognition of the mother's face by six-month-old infants: a neurobehavioral study. , 1997, Child development.

[12]  H. Jasper,et al.  The ten-twenty electrode system of the International Federation. The International Federation of Clinical Neurophysiology. , 1999, Electroencephalography and clinical neurophysiology. Supplement.

[13]  P Salapatek,et al.  Electrophysiological correlates of infant recognition memory. , 1986, Child development.

[14]  Paul F Collins,et al.  Neural and behavioral correlates of visual recognition memory in 4- and 8-month-old infants , 1992, Brain and Cognition.

[15]  E Courchesne,et al.  Event-related brain potentials: comparison between children and adults. , 1977, Science.

[16]  J. Atkinson,et al.  Cognitive neuroscience of attention: A developmental perspective , 1998 .

[17]  H. Huynh,et al.  Conditions under Which Mean Square Ratios in Repeated Measurements Designs Have Exact F-Distributions , 1970 .

[18]  Olivier Bertrand,et al.  Scalp Current Density Mapping: Value and Estimation from Potential Data , 1987, IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering.

[19]  B. J. Casey,et al.  Heart rate variability during attention phases in young infants. , 1991, Psychophysiology.

[20]  M. Kutas,et al.  Localizing the Neural Generators of Event-Related Brain Potentials , 2002 .

[21]  R. R. Hocking The analysis of linear models , 1985 .

[22]  R. Karrer,et al.  Event-related potentials of 4-7-week-old infants in a visual recognition memory task. , 1995, Electroencephalography and clinical neurophysiology.

[23]  J. Richards,et al.  Peripheral stimulus localization by infants with eye and head movements during visual attention , 1997, Vision Research.

[24]  E. Courchesne Neurophysiological correlates of cognitive development: changes in long-latency event-related potentials from childhood to adulthood. , 1978, Electroencephalography and clinical neurophysiology.

[25]  Shayle R. Searle,et al.  Linear Models for Unbalanced Data. , 1990 .

[26]  Charles A. Nelson,et al.  Event-related potential and looking-time analysis of infants' responses to familiar and novel events : implications for visual recognition memory , 1991 .

[27]  J. Richards,et al.  Effects of attention on infants' preference for briefly exposed visual stimuli in the paired-comparison recognition-memory paradigm. , 1997, Developmental psychology.

[28]  R. T. Pivik,et al.  Guidelines for the recording and quantitative analysis of electroencephalographic activity in research contexts. , 1993, Psychophysiology.

[29]  Andrew Kertesz,et al.  Localization and neuroimaging in neuropsychology , 1994 .

[30]  John,et al.  FOUR The development of visual attention and the brain , 2005 .

[31]  W. Roth,et al.  Guidelines for reducing the risk of disease transmission in the psychophysiology laboratory. SPR Ad Hoc Committee on the Prevention of Disease Transmission. , 1992, Psychophysiology.

[32]  R. Karrer,et al.  Visual event-related potentials of infants during a modified oddball procedure. , 1987, Electroencephalography and clinical neurophysiology. Supplement.

[33]  A. Norcia,et al.  Event-related brain potentials to human faces in infants. , 1981, Child Development.

[34]  Guillaume Thierry,et al.  The use of event-related potentials in the study of early cognitive development , 2005 .

[35]  Herbert G. Vaughan,et al.  Early identification of infants with developmental disabilities , 1988 .

[36]  A. Norcia,et al.  Event-related brain potentials to human faces in infants. , 1981, Child development.

[37]  Peter J. Lang,et al.  Attention and Orienting : Sensory and Motivational Processes , 1997 .

[38]  R. Karrer,et al.  Differential effects of experience on the ERP and behavior of 6-month-old infants: trends during repeated stimulus presentations , 1994 .