Kanel Dana, Morales Santiago, Altman Kathryn, Richards John E, Winkler Anderson M, Pine Daniel S, Fox Nathan A, Filippi Courtney A
Department of Human Development and Quantitative Methodology, University of Maryland.
Department of Psychology, University of Southern California.
Dev Psychol. 2025 Jan 6. doi: 10.1037/dev0001892.
Individual differences in how the brain responds to novelty are present from infancy. A common method of studying novelty processing is through event-related potentials (ERPs). While ERPs possess millisecond precision, spatial resolution remains poor, especially in infancy. This study aimed to balance spatial and temporal precision by combining ERP data with functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) data. Twenty-nine infants (15 female) underwent resting-state fMRI ( = 4.73 months) and electroencephalography (EEG) during a three-stimulus auditory oddball task ( = 5.19 months). The mismatch response (MMR) and P3 were computed from ERP data, and resting-state functional connectivity (rs-FC) was computed from fMRI data. We first source localized the MMR and P3 responses to five regions-of-interest (ROIs), based on prior literature. We then performed network-level enrichment analyses to identify associations between rs-FC and MMR and P3, at each of the five ROIs. In line with prior work, source-localized EEG analyses implicated the bilateral auditory cortices, posterior cingulate cortex, and superior parietal cortex in the generation of MMR and P3 responses. The MMR and P3 related to functional connectivity within the somatomotor network as well as between the somatomotor and the dorsal and ventral attention networks (DAN/VAN). This was especially true for novelty response ERPs recorded at superior parietal lobule, known for its implications in initial reorienting to novel stimuli. The DAN, known for its implication in initial reorienting to support novelty detection, was implicated for the MMR. In contrast, the VAN, known for its support of later-stage, complex adjustments in attention, related to the later P3. This work further solidifies our understanding of the underlying networks implicated in the development of immediate responses to stimuli. Altered configurations of such networks may increase the risk for heightened sensitivity to novelty in certain individuals, which could have behavioral and clinical significance. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).
大脑对新奇事物的反应存在个体差异,这种差异从婴儿期就已出现。研究新奇事物处理的一种常见方法是通过事件相关电位(ERP)。虽然ERP具有毫秒级的精度,但空间分辨率仍然很差,尤其是在婴儿期。本研究旨在通过将ERP数据与功能磁共振成像(fMRI)数据相结合来平衡空间和时间精度。29名婴儿(15名女性)在三项刺激的听觉oddball任务期间(平均年龄 = 5.19个月)接受了静息态fMRI(平均年龄 = 4.73个月)和脑电图(EEG)检查。从ERP数据中计算出失配反应(MMR)和P3,从fMRI数据中计算出静息态功能连接(rs-FC)。我们首先根据先前的文献将MMR和P3反应源定位到五个感兴趣区域(ROI)。然后,我们在五个ROI中的每一个上进行网络水平的富集分析,以确定rs-FC与MMR和P3之间的关联。与先前的研究一致,源定位脑电图分析表明双侧听觉皮层、后扣带回皮层和顶上叶皮层参与了MMR和P3反应的产生。MMR和P3与躯体运动网络内以及躯体运动与背侧和腹侧注意网络(DAN/VAN)之间的功能连接有关。对于记录在顶上小叶的新奇反应ERP来说尤其如此,顶上小叶因其在对新刺激的初始重新定向中的作用而闻名。DAN因其在支持新奇检测的初始重新定向中的作用而与MMR有关。相比之下,VAN以其对后期复杂注意力调整的支持而闻名,与后期的P3有关。这项工作进一步巩固了我们对参与刺激即时反应发展的潜在网络的理解。这种网络配置的改变可能会增加某些个体对新奇事物高度敏感的风险,这可能具有行为和临床意义。(PsycInfo数据库记录(c)2025美国心理学会,保留所有权利)