Authors
Gentaro Taga, Kayo Asakawa, Atsushi Maki, Yukuo Konishi, Hideaki Koizumi
Publication date
2003/9/16
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
100
Issue
19
Pages
10722-10727
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
Studies of young infants are critical to understand perceptual, motor, and cognitive processing in humans. However, brain mechanisms involved are poorly understood, because the use of brain-imaging methods such as functional magnetic resonance imaging in awake infants is difficult. In the present study we show functional brain imaging of awake infants viewing visual stimuli by means of multichannel near-infrared spectroscopy, a technique that permits a measurement of cerebral hemoglobin oxygenation in response to brain activation through the intact skull without subject constraint. We found that event-related increases in oxyhemoglobin were evident in localized areas of the occipital cortex of infants aged 2–4 months in response to a brief presentation of a checkerboard pattern reversal while they maintained fixation to attention-grabbing stimuli. The dynamic change in cerebral blood oxygenation was …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
G Taga, K Asakawa, A Maki, Y Konishi, H Koizumi - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2003