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Relations between infants’ emerging reach‐grasp competence and event‐related desynchronization in EEG
Authors:Erin N Cannon  Elizabeth A Simpson  Nathan A Fox  Ross E Vanderwert  Amanda L Woodward  Pier F Ferrari
Institution:1. Department of Human Development and Quantitative Methodology, University of Maryland, USA;2. Dipartimento di Neuroscienze, Università di Parma, Italy;3. Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institutes of Child Health and Human Development, Poolesville, USA;4. Laboratories of Cognitive Neuroscience, Division of Developmental Medicine, Children's Hospital Boston, USA;5. Department of Psychology, University of Chicago, USA
Abstract:Recent reports of similar patterns of brain electrical activity (electroencephalogram: EEG) during action execution and observation, recorded from scalp locations over motor‐related regions in infants and adults, have raised the possibility that two foundational abilities – controlling one's own intentional actions and perceiving others’ actions – may be integrally related during ontogeny. However, to our knowledge, there are no published reports of the relations between developments in motor skill (i.e. recording actual motor skill performance) and EEG during both action execution and action observation. In the present study we collected EEG from 21 9‐month‐olds who were given opportunities to reach for toys and who also observed an experimenter reach for toys. Event‐related desynchronization (ERD) was computed from the EEG during the reaching events. We assessed infants’ reaching‐grasping competence, including reach latency, errors, preshaping of the hand, and bimanual reaches, and found that desynchronization recorded in scalp electrodes over motor‐related regions during action observation was associated with action competence during execution. Infants who were more competent reachers, compared to less competent reachers, exhibited greater ERD while observing reaching‐grasping. These results provide initial evidence for an early emerging neural system integrating one's own actions with the perception of others’ actions.
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