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Recently Published

Research

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  • Woman in Distress Touching Forehead
    Hyperexcitability and Homeostasis in Fragile X Syndrome
    Abstract Fragile X Syndrome (FXS) is a leading inherited cause of autism and intellectual disability, resulting from a mutation in the FMR1 gene and subsequent loss of its protein product FMRP. Despite this simple genetic origin, FXS is a phenotypically complex disorder with a range of physical and neurocognitive disruptions. While numerous molecular and...
  • Parent Holding a Baby's Hand
    Mother–child mutually responsive orientation and real-time physiological coordination
    Abstract From a biobehavioral framework, mother–child physiological and behavioral coordination are interdependent processes that contribute to children's socioemotional development. Little is known, however, about the temporal pattern of real-time physiological coordination or its associations with global levels of mother–child behavioral coordination. We addressed these gaps using data from...
  • Parent Walking with Child
    The role of early attachment and parental presence in adolescent behavioral and neurobiological regulation
    Abstract Early attachment shapes brain development underlying emotion regulation. Given that sensitivity to affective cues is heightened during adolescence and effective emotion regulation strategies continue to develop, it is imperative to examine the role of early attachment and parental influence on adolescent regulation. Fifty-one children (M age=32.61 months) participated in a modified...
  • Mother Carrying Her Child
    Dynamic fluctuations in maternal cardiac vagal tone moderate moment-to-moment associations between children's negative behavior and maternal emotional support
    Abstract Our primary objective was to examine the extent to which moment-to-moment associations between preschool-aged children's behavior and maternal emotional support differed for mothers showing different levels of parasympathetic engagement. We used behavioral observations of maternal and child behavior and maternal changes in cardiac vagal tone assessed via respiratory sinus arrhythmia in...
  • Baby Looking at a Laptop
    Zoom, zoom, baby! Assessing mother-infant interaction during the still face paradigm and infant language development via a virtual visit procedure
    Abstract The COVID-19 pandemic has necessitated innovations in data collection protocols, including use of virtual or remote visits. Although developmental scientists used virtual visits prior to COVID-19, validation of virtual assessments of infant socioemotional and language development are lacking. We aimed to fill this gap by validating a virtual visit protocol that assesses...
  • Mother Holding Her Child
    Toddler-mother attachment modulates adolescents’ evaluation of trustworthiness
    Abstract This longitudinal study examined the prospective association between toddler–mother attachment to adolescents’ (n = 52; 34 boys; Mage = 13.22 years; 90% White) behavioral and neural responses during the evaluation of trustworthiness from unfamiliar, emotionally neutral faces. At 33 months, toddler–mother attachment status (secure vs insecure...
  • Human Baby
    Functional neural network connectivity at 3 months predicts infant-mother dyadic flexibility during play at 6 months
    Abstract Early functioning of neural networks likely underlies the flexible switching between internal and external orientation and may be key to the infant’s ability to effectively engage in social interactions. To test this hypothesis, we examined the association between infants’ neural networks at 3 months and infant-mother dyadic flexibility (denoting the structural variability of their...
  • Bull Frog
    Are frog calls relatively difficult to locate by mammalian predators?
    Abstract Frogs call in acoustically dense choruses to attract conspecific females. Their calls can potentially reveal their location to predators, many of which are mammals. However, frogs and mammals have very different acoustic receivers and mechanisms for determining sound source direction. We argue that frog calls may have been selected so that they are harder to locate with the direction-...
  • Measurement of Sound
    A dynamic spike threshold with correlated noise predicts observed patterns of negative interval correlations in neuronal spike trains
    Abstract Negative correlations in the sequential evolution of interspike intervals (ISIs) are a signature of memory in neuronal spike-trains. They provide coding benefits including firing-rate stabilization, improved detectability of weak sensory signals, and enhanced transmission of information by improving signal-to-noise ratio. Primary electrosensory afferent spike-trains in weakly electric...

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