Abstract
Objective: To determine the early development of novelty detection and the effect of familial dyslexia risk and infant music intervention on this development. Methods: In the longitudinal DyslexiaBaby study, we investigated the maturation of novelty-P3 and late-discriminative negativity (LDN) event-related potentials to novel sounds at birth (N = 177) and at the ages of 6 (N = 83) and 28 months (N = 131). Results: Novelty-P3 was elicited at all ages, whereas LDN was elicited at 6 and 28 months. Novelty-P3 amplitude was largest at 6 months, and its latency decreased with age. LDN amplitude decreased and latency increased between 6 to 28 months. Dyslexia risk or intervention had no effects, apart from a longer LDN latency in the high-risk than no-risk group. Conclusions: Already neonates respond to novel environmental sounds, indicating prerequisites for detecting potentially relevant events at birth. Maturation influences neural novelty detection. Significance: Novelty detection is crucial for perceiving important events, but its early development has been scarcely studied. We found, with a large sample, that neonates detect novel events, and showed the developmental pattern of its neural signature. The results serve as a reference for studies on typical and atypical novelty-detection development in infancy when behavioral testing is challenging.
Original language | English |
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Journal | Clinical Neurophysiology |
Volume | 167 |
Pages (from-to) | 131-142 |
Number of pages | 12 |
ISSN | 1388-2457 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Nov 2024 |
MoE publication type | A1 Journal article-refereed |
Bibliographical note
Publisher Copyright:© 2024 International Federation of Clinical Neurophysiology
Fields of Science
- 515 Psychology
- 3112 Neurosciences
- Attentional maturation
- Auditory novelty detection
- Dyslexia risk
- LDN
- Music intervention
- Novelty-P3