AI Article Synopsis

  • Contingent learning helps infants explore their environment, supporting their development across various areas.
  • This study investigates how infants' motor responses, such as unilateral kicks, synchronized kicks, and alternate kicks, relate to their ability to learn from audio-visual feedback.
  • The findings reveal that specific brain activity, particularly in the right temporal lobe, can predict the effectiveness of different motor responses in contingent learning among infants.

Article Abstract

Contingent learning is an agent for infants to explore the environment, which enhances the maturation of different developmental domains. This paper presents one of the first to investigate neural activities related to contingent learning of infants by analyzing their motor response that could elicit an audio-visual feedback. Three different kinds of motor response of infants were investigated, including unilateral kicks, synchronized kicks, and alternate kicks. Electroencephalographic (EEG) signals of infants were recorded before the motor experiments. Higher theta band power and lower upper beta power at the right temporal lobe of infants predicted a higher ratio of total unilateral kicks and a lower ratio of synchronized kicks at the later acquisition stage of the experiment. As contingent learning could be reflected by specific motor response in relation to the audio-visual stimuli, the results suggested that right temporal oscillations could predict different levels of contingent learning of infants.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/EMBC44109.2020.9175424DOI Listing

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