8 results on '"Valadez, Emilio A."'
Search Results
2. Longitudinal age- and sex-related change in background aperiodic activity during early adolescence.
- Author
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McSweeney M, Morales S, Valadez EA, Buzzell GA, and Fox NA
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Female, Humans, Language, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Sex Characteristics, Adolescent Development, Brain physiology
- Abstract
Aperiodic activity contains important and meaningful physiological information that has been shown to dynamically change with age. However, no longitudinal studies have examined its development during early-to-mid adolescence. The current study closes this gap by investigating age- and sex-related longitudinal change in aperiodic activity across early-to-mid adolescence (N = 186; 54.3% female). Participants completed a resting state task and a Flanker task while EEG was record at age 13 years and again at age 15 years. Across different tasks and two time points, we observed significant age-related reductions in aperiodic offset and exponent. In addition, we observed significant sex-related differences in the aperiodic offset and exponent over time. We did not find any significant correlation between aperiodic activity and behavioral measures, nor did we find any significant condition-dependent change in aperiodic activity during the Flanker task. However, we did observe significant correlations between aperiodic activity across tasks and over time, suggesting that aperiodic activity may demonstrate stable trait-like characteristics. Collectively, these results may suggest a developmental parallelism between decreases in aperiodic components alongside adolescent brain development during this period; changes to cortical and subcortical brain structure and organization during early adolescence may have been responsible for the observed sex-related effects., (Published by Elsevier Ltd.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Association of Prenatal Alcohol Exposure With Psychological, Behavioral, and Neurodevelopmental Outcomes in Children From the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development Study.
- Author
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Lees B, Mewton L, Jacobus J, Valadez EA, Stapinski LA, Teesson M, Tapert SF, and Squeglia LM
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- Adult, Brain diagnostic imaging, Brain physiopathology, Case-Control Studies, Child, Child Behavior drug effects, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Neuroimaging, Neuropsychological Tests, Pregnancy, Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects physiopathology, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, Brain pathology, Child Development drug effects, Cognition drug effects, Ethanol adverse effects, Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects pathology
- Abstract
Objective: Data on the neurodevelopmental and associated behavioral effects of light to moderate in utero alcohol exposure are limited. This retrospective investigation tested for associations between reported maternal prenatal alcohol use and psychological, behavioral, and neurodevelopmental outcomes in substance-naive youths., Methods: Participants were 9,719 youths (ages 9.0 to 10.9 years) from the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development Study. Based on parental reports, 2,518 (25.9%) had been exposed to alcohol in utero. Generalized additive mixed models and multilevel cross-sectional and longitudinal mediation models were used to test whether prenatal alcohol exposure was associated with psychological, behavioral, and cognitive outcomes, and whether differences in brain structure and resting-state functional connectivity partially explained these associations at baseline and 1-year follow-up, after controlling for possible confounding factors., Results: Prenatal alcohol exposure of any severity was associated with greater psychopathology, attention deficits, and impulsiveness, with some effects showing a dose-dependent response. Children with prenatal alcohol exposure, compared with those without, displayed greater cerebral and regional volume and greater regional surface area. Resting-state functional connectivity was largely unaltered in children with in utero exposure. Some of the psychological and behavioral outcomes at baseline and at the 1-year follow-up were partially explained by differences in brain structure among youths who had been exposed to alcohol in utero., Conclusions: Any alcohol use during pregnancy is associated with subtle yet significant psychological and behavioral effects in children. Women should continue to be advised to abstain from alcohol consumption from conception throughout pregnancy.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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4. Early Parenting Intervention Effects on Brain Responses to Maternal Cues Among High-Risk Children.
- Author
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Valadez EA, Tottenham N, Tabachnick AR, and Dozier M
- Subjects
- Brain physiopathology, Child, Child Development physiology, Cues, Female, Humans, Infant, Longitudinal Studies, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Male, Neurodevelopmental Disorders prevention & control, Object Attachment, Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care, Parent-Child Relations, Psychology, Developmental methods, Risk Assessment, Brain diagnostic imaging, Education, Nonprofessional methods, Mothers psychology, Parenting psychology, Social Skills
- Abstract
Objective: Early adversity is correlated with increased risk for negative outcomes, including psychopathology and atypical neurodevelopment. The authors aimed to test the causal impact of an early parenting intervention (Attachment and Biobehavioral Catch-Up; ABC) on children's neural processing of parent cues and on psychosocial functioning in a longitudinal randomized clinical trial., Methods: Participants (N=68, mean age, 10.0 years [SD=0.8 years]) were 46 high-risk children whose parents were randomly assigned to receive either the ABC intervention (N=22) or a control intervention (N=24) while the children were infants, in addition to a comparison sample of low-risk children (N=22). During functional MRI scanning, children viewed pictures of their own mothers and of a stranger., Results: Children in the ABC condition showed greater maternal cue-related activation than children in the control condition in clusters of brain regions, including the precuneus, the cingulate gyrus, and the hippocampus, regions commonly associated with social cognition. Additionally, greater activity in these regions was associated with fewer total behavior problems. There was an indirect effect of early intervention on middle childhood psychosocial functioning mediated through increased activity in brain regions in response to maternal cues., Conclusions: These results suggest that early parenting intervention (in this case the ABC intervention) can enhance brain regions supporting children's social cognitive development. In addition, the findings highlight these brain effects as a possible neural pathway through which ABC may prevent future behavior problems among high-risk children, yielding psychosocial benefits that endure through at least middle childhood without the need to intervene with the child directly.
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- 2020
- Full Text
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5. The power of frontal midline theta and post-error slowing to predict performance recovery: Evidence for compensatory mechanisms.
- Author
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Valadez EA and Simons RF
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Electroencephalography, Female, Humans, Male, Psychomotor Performance physiology, Reaction Time physiology, Young Adult, Brain physiology, Cognition physiology, Evoked Potentials physiology, Theta Rhythm physiology
- Abstract
Past studies utilizing cognitive control tasks have noted that trials following errors are characterized by slowed reaction time. Despite the assumption long held by researchers that this slowing is compensatory (in the service of post-error performance recovery), studies consistently show that post-error trials are no more accurate than post-correct trials. As a result, it has recently been proposed that post-error slowing (PES) is merely part of an orienting response that serves no task-relevant cognitive control purpose. Frontal midline theta (FMθ) oscillations represent another potential compensatory mechanism serving cognitive control processes, yet past studies relying on ERPs have failed to find an association between FMθ and post-error accuracy. The present study investigated the potentially adaptive role of PES and FMθ oscillations during a flanker task using trial-by-trial comparisons. Results indicated that error-related FMθ oscillations signal the need for enhanced top-down cognitive control and that PES supports cognitive control by providing the added time needed to achieve greater confidence in judgment. Overall, findings provide convergent evidence that both error-related FMθ and PES predict performance recovery following errors., (© 2017 Society for Psychophysiological Research.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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6. How dispositional social risk-seeking promotes trusting strangers: Evidence based on brain potentials and neural oscillations.
- Author
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Wang Y, Jing Y, Zhang Z, Lin C, and Valadez EA
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, China, Electroencephalography, Evoked Potentials, Female, Humans, Male, Students psychology, Students statistics & numerical data, Young Adult, Brain physiology, Decision Making, Risk-Taking, Social Behavior, Trust psychology
- Abstract
Trust is a risky social decision because betrayal may occur. It's not clear how individual differences in social risk-seeking propensity modulate brain processes of trusting strangers. We examined event-related potentials and time-frequency power to investigate this question while 40 participants played the one-shot trust game. Twenty high social risk-seekers (HSR) and 20 low social risk-seekers (LSR) made trusting or distrusting decisions regarding unknown trustees while their electroencephalogram activity was recorded. At the decision-making stage, HSR participants exhibited a larger N2 and increased β power following distrusting decisions than trusting decisions, suggesting greater cognitive control exerted to distrust. By contrast, no such N2 and β differences were found for LSR participants. At the outcome evaluation stage, LSR participants exhibited a more negative-going difference wave between loss feedback-related negativity (FRN) and gain FRN (dFRN) and increased θ power (following losses compared to gains) than did HSR participants, indicating enhanced risk sensitivity of LSR people. Our findings provide insights into the mechanism by which social risk-taking facilitates trusting strangers. The results also shed light on the temporal course of brain activity involved in trust decision-making and outcome evaluation, as well as how individual differences modulate brain dynamics of trusting strangers. (PsycINFO Database Record, ((c) 2017 APA, all rights reserved).)
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- 2017
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7. How do we trust strangers? The neural correlates of decision making and outcome evaluation of generalized trust.
- Author
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Wang Y, Zhang Z, Jing Y, Valadez EA, and Simons RF
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Electroencephalography, Female, Humans, Interpersonal Relations, Male, Young Adult, Brain physiology, Decision Making physiology, Evoked Potentials physiology, Reward, Trust
- Abstract
This study investigates the brain correlates of decision making and outcome evaluation of generalized trust (i.e. trust in unfamiliar social agents)-a core component of social capital which facilitates civic cooperation and economic exchange. We measured 18 (9 male) Chinese participants' event-related potentials while they played the role of the trustor in a one-shot trust game with unspecified social agents (trustees) allegedly selected from a large representative sample. At the decision-making phase, greater N2 amplitudes were found for trustors' distrusting decisions compared to trusting decisions, which may reflect greater cognitive control exerted to distrust. Source localization identified the precentral gyrus as one possible neuronal generator of this N2 component. At the outcome evaluation phase, principal components analysis revealed that the so called feedback-related negativity was in fact driven by a reward positivity, which was greater in response to gain feedback compared to loss feedback. This reduced reward positivity following loss feedback may indicate that the absence of reward for trusting decisions was unexpected by the trustor. In addition, we found preliminary evidence suggesting that the decision-making processes may differ between high trustors and low trustors., (© The Author (2016). Published by Oxford University Press. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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8. DEEP: A dual EEG pipeline for developmental hyperscanning studies
- Author
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Ezgi Kayhan, Daniel Matthes, Ira Marriott Haresign, Anna Bánki, Christine Michel, Miriam Langeloh, Sam Wass, Stefanie Hoehl, Buzzell, George (PhD), Valadez, Emilio (PhD), Morales, Santiago, Fox, Nathan, and Hunnius, Sabine (M.Sc.)
- Subjects
Dual EEG analysis ,Adult-child interaction ,Brain Mapping ,Phase Locking Value ,Developmental hyperscanning ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Brain ,Mothers ,Electroencephalography ,Extern ,Strukturbereich Kognitionswissenschaften ,Cross-frequency PLV ,PLV ,Humans ,FieldTrip ,Female ,ddc:610 - Abstract
Cutting-edge hyperscanning methods led to a paradigm shift in social neuroscience. It allowed researchers to measure dynamic mutual alignment of neural processes between two or more individuals in naturalistic contexts. The ever-growing interest in hyperscanning research calls for the development of transparent and validated data analysis methods to further advance the field. We have developed and tested a dual electroencephalography (EEG) analysis pipeline, namely DEEP. Following the preprocessing of the data, DEEP allows users to calculate Phase Locking Values (PLVs) and cross-frequency PLVs as indices of inter-brain phase alignment of dyads as well as time-frequency responses and EEG power for each participant. The pipeline also includes scripts to control for spurious correlations. Our goal is to contribute to open and reproducible science practices by making DEEP publicly available together with an example mother-infant EEG hyperscanning dataset.
- Published
- 2021
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