Department of Psychology, Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA.
Department of Psychology, Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA.
Trends Cogn Sci. 2018 May;22(5):375-387. doi: 10.1016/j.tics.2018.01.005. Epub 2018 Feb 24.
Our understanding of the typical human brain has benefitted greatly from studying different kinds of brains and their associated behavioral repertoires, including animal models and neuropsychological patients. This same comparative perspective can be applied to early development - the environment, behavior, and brains of infants provide a model system for understanding how the mature brain works. This approach requires noninvasive methods for measuring brain function in awake, behaving infants. fMRI is becoming increasingly viable for this purpose, with the unique ability to precisely measure the entire brain, including both cortical and subcortical structures. Here we discuss potential lessons from infant fMRI for several domains of adult cognition and consider the challenges of conducting such research and how they might be mitigated.
我们对典型人类大脑的理解得益于对不同大脑及其相关行为表现的研究,包括动物模型和神经心理患者。这种比较的观点也适用于早期发育——婴儿的环境、行为和大脑为理解成熟大脑的工作方式提供了一个模型系统。这种方法需要在清醒、行为的婴儿中使用非侵入性的方法来测量大脑功能。功能磁共振成像(fMRI)在这方面变得越来越可行,它具有精确测量整个大脑的独特能力,包括皮质和皮质下结构。在这里,我们讨论了婴儿 fMRI 对成人认知的几个领域的潜在启示,并考虑了进行此类研究的挑战以及如何减轻这些挑战。