Publications by authors named "Kalervo Suominen"

Objectives: The aim of the study was to compare the EEG findings and haemodynamic parameters of adult male patients while undergoing mask induction with sevoflurane anaesthesia with either controlled hyperventilation (CH) or spontaneous breathing (SB).

Methods: Twenty male patients, aged 23-52 (mean 42) years were anaesthetized randomly with either spontaneous breathing or mild controlled hyperventilation via mask. EEG was recorded using a full 10-20 electrode set.

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Background: A large group of young children are exposed to repetitive middle ear infections but the effects of the fluctuating hearing sensations on immature central auditory system are not fully understood. The present study investigated the consequences of early childhood recurrent acute otitis media (RAOM) on involuntary auditory attention switching.

Methods: By utilizing auditory event-related potentials, neural mechanisms of involuntary attention were studied in 22-26 month-old children (N = 18) who had had an early childhood RAOM and healthy controls (N = 19).

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The brain's ability to recognize different acoustic cues (e.g., frequency changes in rapid temporal succession) is important for speech perception and thus for successful language development.

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Purpose: Recent theoretical conceptualizations suggest that disfluencies in stuttering may arise from several factors, one of them being atypical auditory processing. The main purpose of the present study was to investigate whether speech sound encoding and central auditory discrimination, are affected in children who stutter (CWS).

Methods: Participants were 10 CWS, and 12 typically developing children with fluent speech (TDC).

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Article Synopsis
  • The study examined how native and non-native sign language users, along with non-signing controls, integrate semantic information from spoken and signed language through brain activity measurements during a semantic decision task.
  • Event-related brain potentials (ERPs) were analyzed to assess the N400 and LPC components, showing that native signers had distinct neural responses to visual targets, while non-native signers demonstrated a lack of semantic processing for these targets.
  • Results indicate that different groups rely on varying cognitive strategies for semantic integration, highlighting how language background influences signers' processing of both signed and spoken language.
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  • Ongoing neural activity in the central nervous system (CNS) shows spontaneous fluctuations that can be observed through BOLD signals in fMRI and consistently appear in specific brain networks.
  • Both fast oscillation dynamics and scalp potential fluctuations occur within a similar low-frequency range, leading to questions about their relationship.
  • Using simultaneous fbEEG and fMRI, the study found that infra-slow fluctuations in scalp potentials correlate with specific BOLD signals in defined resting-state networks, suggesting that these potentials reflect underlying changes in neuronal activity levels.
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Objectives: To investigate at the age of 2 years the effects of childhood recurrent acute otitis media (RAOM) on central auditory processing by using cortical event-related potentials elicited by syllable stimuli.

Design: During a 1-year period, 22- to 26-month-old children fulfilling the criteria for tympanostomy tube insertion in Oulu University Hospital, Oulu, Finland, were recruited to the RAOM group (N = 20). The control group (N = 19) was matched by age, sex, and mother's educational level.

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This study evaluated whether the linguistic multi-feature paradigm with five types of speech-sound changes and novel sounds is an eligible neurophysiologic measure of central auditory processing in toddlers. Participants were 18 typically developing 2-year-old children. Syllable stimuli elicited significant obligatory responses and syllable changes significant MMN (mismatch negativity) which suggests that toddlers can discriminate auditory features from alternating speech-sound stream.

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  • Asperger syndrome (AS) is a condition marked by challenges in social communication and patterns of behavior.
  • Researchers investigated if stress responses, measured through heart rate variability (HRV) and EEG, differ between children with AS and normal controls during a stressful audiovisual test.
  • Findings indicated that children with AS exhibited heightened sympathetic activity and greater EEG changes compared to controls, suggesting they react more strongly to stressful situations.
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Objective. To evaluate spectral heart rate (HR) variation using short-term ECG recordings at rest and during the tilt table test. Methods.

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Penicillin-induced focal epilepsy is a well-known model in experimental epilepsy. However, the dynamic evolution of waveforms, DC-level changes, spectral content and coherence are rarely reported. Stimulated by earlier fMRI findings, we also seek for the early signs preceding spiking activity from frequency domain of EEG signal.

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Our aim was to explore time-varying coherence values versus spacing and referencing of electrode contacts in thalamic level from human encephalographic (EEG) data. Data has been acquired during induction of propofol anesthesia until burst-suppression level in scalp EEG. Results are shown from coherence analysis applied to EEG signals from selected depth electrode contacts pair-wise of three subjects.

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Penicillin-induced focal epilepsy is a well-known model in epilepsy research. In this model, epileptic activity is generated by delivering penicillin focally to the cortex. The drug induces interictal electroencephalographic (EEG) spikes which evolve in time and may later change to ictal discharges.

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Background: Early auditory experiences are a prerequisite for speech and language acquisition. In healthy children, phoneme discrimination abilities improve for native and degrade for unfamiliar, socially irrelevant phoneme contrasts between 6 and 12 months of age as the brain tunes itself to, and specializes in the native spoken language. This process is known as perceptual narrowing, and has been found to predict normal native language acquisition.

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Objectives: Optic neuritis (ON) is a frequent initial manifestation of multiple sclerosis (MS). Autonomic failure affecting the pupillary function is known to exist in ON patients, and patients with MS are known to have more widespread autonomic dysfunction. For example, sudomotor dysfunction is well known in MS.

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  • Asperger's syndrome (AS) is a type of autism spectrum disorder marked by significant challenges in social interaction, particularly in emotional reciprocity.
  • A study examining how adolescents with AS (12 participants) compared to typically developing adolescents (15 participants) recognize basic emotions in speech found that both groups performed similarly in identifying emotions like happy, sad, angry, and neutral.
  • The results suggest that the ability to recognize basic emotions from speech may develop during childhood, rather than being entirely impaired in those with AS.
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Many people with the diagnosis of Asperger syndrome (AS) show poorly developed skills in understanding emotional messages. The present study addressed discrimination of speech prosody in children with AS at neurophysiological level. Detection of affective prosody was investigated in one-word utterances as indexed by the N1 and the mismatch negativity (MMN) of auditory event-related potentials (ERPs).

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  • In cases of interictal activity in EEG, fMRI often fails to identify epileptic foci, prompting a study to develop an experimental model for focal epilepsy using simultaneous EEG/fMRI and deep anesthesia.
  • The study involved administering penicillin to induce localized epileptic activity in seven pigs, revealing that BOLD signal changes correlated with spike activity could be detected even before the spikes appeared on the EEG.
  • The findings suggest this model could enhance the understanding of epileptic activity localization and its temporal dynamics, improving methods for identifying seizure foci.
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Differences in the blood oxygen level dependent (BOLD) signal changes were studied during voluntary hyperventilation (HV) between young healthy volunteer groups, (1) with intermittent rhythmic delta activity (IRDA) (N = 4) and (2) controls (N = 4) with only diffuse arrhythmic slowing in EEG (normal response). Subjects hyperventilated (3 min) during an 8-min functional MRI in a 1.5-T scanner, with simultaneous recording of EEG (successful with N = 3 in both groups) and physiological parameters.

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Diminished heart rate (HR) variability has been reported in patients with early phase Parkinson's disease (PD) using standardized cardiovascular reflex tests. However, limited data exist on HR variability during sleep; thus the present study was performed to investigate the characteristics of HR variability during different sleep stages. The HR variability of 21 newly diagnosed and untreated PD patients and of 22 control subjects was evaluated by using time domain, frequency domain and non-linear methods and by analyzing HR reactions to body movements during the different sleep stages (non-REM stages S1-4 and the REM stage).

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  • The study aimed to assess object naming ability and auditory processing in children born prematurely, focusing on the correlation between early MMN parameters and later naming abilities.
  • Twelve very low birth weight (VLBW) preterm children and matched controls were evaluated using a naming test and auditory event-related potentials (ERPs) to measure their responses.
  • Results showed that VLBW children performed worse on the naming test and had smaller MMN amplitudes, indicating potential language difficulties, suggesting that monitoring MMN could help identify children at risk for language impairments.
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Very low birth weight (VLBW, <1500 g) preterm birth has been associated with anatomic abnormalities in brain development and cognitive and language disorders. We examined object naming ability, and an electrophysiologic index of auditory sensory discrimination of speech sounds (the mismatch negativity, MMN) in 4-year-old VLBW prematurely born children. We found that half of the VLBW children were inferior to their controls in the object naming ability.

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Asperger Syndrome (AS) is characterized by normal language development but deficient understanding and use of the intonation and prosody of speech. While individuals with AS report difficulties in auditory perception, there are no studies addressing auditory processing at the sensory level. In this study, event-related potentials (ERP) were recorded for syllables and tones in children with AS and in their control counterparts.

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Deepening anesthesia produces well known changes in electroencephalogram (EEG) and evoked potentials, differing in pathological and normal brain. Yet, it is not known how the T2*-weighted signal changes in the healthy brain during deepening anesthesia. We studied the effect of thiopental bolus on functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) in the healthy brain using porcine model.

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