Xiao Co-Authors Study on EEG Measures

Xiao Co-Authors Study on EEG Measures

ran xiao headshotRan Xiao, assistant professor, co-published “Electroencephalography measures of relative power and coherence as reaching skill emerges in infants born preterm" for Scientific Reports. Xiao provides equal contribution and shares co-first authorship of the paper. The study provides insights into electroencephalography (EEG) measures of relative power and coherence associated with motor experience in infants born preterm. His colleagues at University of Southern California Children’s Hospital Los Angeles (USC-CHLA) are co-authors. 

Abstract

Electroencephalography (EEG) measures of relative power and coherence are associated with motor experience in infants with typical development, but these relationships have not been assessed in infants born preterm. The goal of our study was to investigate the changing patterns of relative power and coherence in the alpha band during resting state EEG in infants born preterm as they developed the skill of reaching. We collected monthly longitudinal data from fourteen infants born preterm between the adjusted ages of 56 and 295 days for a total of 37 sessions of EEG data. Alpha band power at motor cortices and cross-regional connectivity do not present consistent changing trends at the group level in infants born preterm. Individual level analysis reveals that infants born preterm are a heterogeneous group with subtypes of neural function development, some presenting similar changing trends as observed in the typically developing group while others present atypical patterns. This may be linked to the variability in developmental outcomes in infants born preterm. This study was a critical first step to support EEG as a potential tool for identifying and quantifying the developmental trajectories of neuromotor control in infants born preterm.

Citation

R. NishiyoriCO, R. XiaoCO, D. Vanderbilt, and B. A. Smith, “Electroencephalography measures of relative power and coherence as reaching skill emerges in infants born preterm,” Sci. Rep., vol. 11, no. 1, p. 3609, Dec. 2021, doi: 10.1038/s41598-021-82329-7.

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