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Temporal dynamics of travelling theta wave activity in infants responding to visual looming
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  • Published: 03 March 2009

Temporal dynamics of travelling theta wave activity in infants responding to visual looming

  • Ruud van der Weel1 &
  • Audrey van der Meer1 

Nature Precedings (2009)Cite this article

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Abstract

A fundamental property of most animals is the ability to see whether an object is approaching on a direct collision course and, if so, when it will collide. Using high-density electroencephalography in 5- to 11-month-old infants and a looming stimulus approaching under three different accelerations, we investigated how the young human nervous system extracts and processes information for impending collision. Here we show that infants' looming related brain activity is characterized by theta oscillations. Source analyses reveal clear localised activity in the visual cortex. Analysing the temporal dynamics of the source waveform, we provide evidence that the temporal structure of different looming stimuli is sustained during processing in the more mature infant brain, providing infants with increasingly veridical time-to-collision information about looming danger as they grow older and become mobile.

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Authors and Affiliations

  1. Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU) https://www.nature.com/nature

    Ruud van der Weel & Audrey van der Meer

Authors
  1. Ruud van der Weel
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  2. Audrey van der Meer
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Correspondence to Ruud van der Weel.

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van der Weel, R., van der Meer, A. Temporal dynamics of travelling theta wave activity in infants responding to visual looming. Nat Prec (2009). https://doi.org/10.1038/npre.2009.2917.1

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  • Received: 03 March 2009

  • Accepted: 03 March 2009

  • Published: 03 March 2009

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/npre.2009.2917.1

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Keywords

  • Travelling theta wave activity
  • Infant looming
  • temporal dynamics
  • time-to-collision information
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