Atypical phase alignment of low-frequency neural oscillations to speech rhythm has been implicated in phonological deficits in developmental dyslexia. Atypical phase alignment to rhythm could thus also characterize infants at risk for later language difficulties. Here, we investigate phase-language mechanisms in a neurotypical infant sample.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Liaison psychiatry provision for children and young people in England is poorly evaluated.
Aims: We sought to evaluate paediatric liaison psychiatry provision and develop recommendations to improve practice.
Method: The liaison psychiatry surveys of England (LPSE) cross-sectional surveys engage all liaison psychiatry services in England.