1. Developmental Trajectory of the Frequency-Following Response During the First 6 Months of Life.
- Author
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Ribas-Prats T, Cordero G, Lip-Sosa DL, Arenillas-Alcón S, Costa-Faidella J, Gómez-Roig MD, and Escera C
- Subjects
- Infant, Newborn, Infant, Humans, Language Development, Phonetics, Electroencephalography, Speech Perception physiology
- Abstract
Purpose: The aim of the present study is to characterize the maturational changes during the first 6 months of life in the neural encoding of two speech sound features relevant for early language acquisition: the stimulus fundamental frequency ( f
o ), related to stimulus pitch, and the vowel formant composition, particularly F1 . The frequency-following response (FFR) was used as a snapshot into the neural encoding of these two stimulus attributes., Method: FFRs to a consonant-vowel stimulus /da/ were retrieved from electroencephalographic recordings in a sample of 80 healthy infants (45 at birth and 35 at the age of 1 month). Thirty-two infants (16 recorded at birth and 16 recorded at 1 month) returned for a second recording at 6 months of age., Results: Stimulus fo and F1 encoding showed improvements from birth to 6 months of age. Most remarkably, a significant improvement in the F1 neural encoding was observed during the first month of life., Conclusion: Our results highlight the rapid and sustained maturation of the basic neural machinery necessary for the phoneme discrimination ability during the first 6 months of age.- Published
- 2023
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