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Assessment of the improvement of signal recorded in infant EEG by using eye tracking algorithms

Published: 26 March 2014 Publication History

Abstract

Event-related potentials (ERPs) elicited by visual stimuli consist in showing the same stimuli to the subject dozens of times while recording the electrical brain activity and averaging afterwards the EEG signal of the valid trials to get rid of the general brain activity and keep the response generated by the stimuli. ERPs are a common methodology used among cognitive developmental scientists to investigate how infants develop because responses to external events can be observed in ERP without specific behavioral requirements from the infants. However, applying this technique to infants has some disadvantages that are not found in adult participants. These are mainly the limited attention span and the difficulty of getting enough free-artifact trials due to movement artifacts and lack of attention to the stimuli. These limitations are the main reason for the current attrition rates in infant ERP studies, which are expected of between 50%-75% [DeBoer et al., 2007; Stets et al., 2012].

References

[1]
Aslin, R. N. 2012. Infant eyes: a window on cognitive development. In Infancy, vol. 17, 126--140.
[2]
DeBoer, T., Scott, L. S., Nelson, C. A. 2007. Methods for acquiring and analyzing infant event-related potentials. In Infant EEG and Event-related Potentials. England, Psychology Press. pp. 5--37.
[3]
Gredebäck, G., Johnson, S. 2009. Eye tracking in infancy research. In Developmental Neuropsychology vol. 35, 1--19.
[4]
Hoehl, S., Reid, V., Mooney, J., Striano, T. 2008. What are you looking at? Infants' neural processing of an adult's object-directed eye gaze. In Developmental Science, vol. 11, 10--16.
[5]
Hoehl, S., Wahl, S. 2012. Recording Infant ERP Data for Cognitive Research. In Developmental Neuropsychology, vol. 37, 187--209.
[6]
Reid, V. M., Csibra, G., Belsky, J., Johnson, M. H. 2007. Neural correlates of the perception of goal-directed action in infants. In Acta Psychologica (Amst.), vol. 124, 129--138.
[7]
Stets, M., Stahl, D., Reid, V. M. 2012. A Meta-Analysis Investigating Factors Underlying Attrition Rates in Infant ERP Studies. In Developmental Neuropsychology, vol. 37, 226--252.

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cover image ACM Conferences
ETRA '14: Proceedings of the Symposium on Eye Tracking Research and Applications
March 2014
394 pages
ISBN:9781450327510
DOI:10.1145/2578153
Permission to make digital or hard copies of part or all of this work for personal or classroom use is granted without fee provided that copies are not made or distributed for profit or commercial advantage and that copies bear this notice and the full citation on the first page. Copyrights for third-party components of this work must be honored. For all other uses, contact the Owner/Author.

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Association for Computing Machinery

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Published: 26 March 2014

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ETRA '14
ETRA '14: Eye Tracking Research and Applications
March 26 - 28, 2014
Florida, Safety Harbor

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