171 results on '"Hoehl, S"'
Search Results
2. Mother-infant social gaze dynamics relate to infant brain activity and word segmentation
- Author
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Vanoncini, M, Hoehl, S, Elsner, B, Wallot, S, Boll-Avetisyan, N, Kayhan, E, Vanoncini, Monica, Hoehl, Stefanie, Elsner, Birgit, Wallot, Sebastian, Boll-Avetisyan, Natalie, Kayhan, Ezgi, Vanoncini, M, Hoehl, S, Elsner, B, Wallot, S, Boll-Avetisyan, N, Kayhan, E, Vanoncini, Monica, Hoehl, Stefanie, Elsner, Birgit, Wallot, Sebastian, Boll-Avetisyan, Natalie, and Kayhan, Ezgi
- Abstract
The ‘social brain’, consisting of areas sensitive to social information, supposedly gates the mechanisms involved in human language learning. Early preverbal interactions are guided by ostensive signals, such as gaze patterns, which are coordinated across body, brain, and environment. However, little is known about how the infant brain processes social gaze in naturalistic interactions and how this relates to infant language development. During free-play of 9-month-olds with their mothers, we recorded hemodynamic cortical activity of ́social brain` areas (prefrontal cortex, temporo-parietal junctions) via fNIRS, and micro-coded mother's and infant's social gaze. Infants’ speech processing was assessed with a word segmentation task. Using joint recurrence quantification analysis, we examined the connection between infants’ ́social brain` activity and the temporal dynamics of social gaze at intrapersonal (i.e., infant's coordination, maternal coordination) and interpersonal (i.e., dyadic coupling) levels. Regression modeling revealed that intrapersonal dynamics in maternal social gaze (but not infant's coordination or dyadic coupling) coordinated significantly with infant's cortical activity. Moreover, recurrence quantification analysis revealed that intrapersonal maternal social gaze dynamics (in terms of entropy) were the best predictor of infants’ word segmentation. The findings support the importance of social interaction in language development, particularly highlighting maternal social gaze dynamics.
- Published
- 2024
3. Individual differences in infants’ speech segmentation performance: The role of mother-infant cardiac synchrony
- Author
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Vanoncini, M, Kayhan, E, Wunderwald, M, Wallot, S, Elsner, B, Hoehl, S, Boll-Avetisyan, N, Wallot, S., Vanoncini, M, Kayhan, E, Wunderwald, M, Wallot, S, Elsner, B, Hoehl, S, Boll-Avetisyan, N, and Wallot, S.
- Abstract
Introduction: Coregulation entails the regulatory processes that are embedded within infant-caregiver exchanges and it represents the first form of communication. While its presence may be evident at moments of infant distress, coregulation is also present during dyadic exchanges on a moment-to-moment basis. Recent studies have found a relation between behavioral and neural aspects of coregulation (emotional facial expressions, Vanoncini et al., 2022; social gaze and infant’s social brain, Vanoncini et al., 2024) and language learning. We investigated whether this link would extend to one of the first types of coregulation, namely biological coregulation, which was measured through recursive patterns of cardiac synchrony. We hypothesized that higher levels of cardiac synchrony are linked to better word segmentation. Methods: Twenty-eight 9-month-old infants (16 females) and their German-speaking mothers participated in the study. We asked mothers to play for 5 minutes with their infant as they would do at home. During this time, through dual-electrocardiogram, we measured Respiratory Sinus Arrhythmia, a biomarker commonly used for parent-child cardiac synchrony. Then, we examined infants’ word-segmentation ability with a central fixation paradigm using eye-tracking. Stimuli were based on Bartels and colleagues (2009). We familiarized infants with auditory text passages in German and measured looking times while listening to familiar versus novel test words. Following cross-recurrence quantification analysis, we used entropy (ENTR; degree of predictability characterizing the dyadic system) and cross recurrence rate (cross RR; tendency of the dyadic system to repeat itself) as measures of cardiac synchrony. Results: Regression modelling revealed that cross RR, but not ENTR, interacted with trial type: the higher the cross RR of mother’s and infant’s RSA during interaction, the longer infants looked during presentation of novel compared to familiar words at test, indic
- Published
- 2024
4. Die Virologie von SARS-CoV-2
- Author
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Hoehl, S. and Ciesek, S.
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- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Editorial: Entrainment and responses to rhythmic stimulation during development
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Peykarjou, S, Hoehl, S, Leleu, A, Lochy, A, Macchi Cassia, V, Peykarjou, Stefanie, Hoehl, Stefanie, Leleu, Arnaud, Lochy, Aliette, Macchi Cassia, Viola, Peykarjou, S, Hoehl, S, Leleu, A, Lochy, A, Macchi Cassia, V, Peykarjou, Stefanie, Hoehl, Stefanie, Leleu, Arnaud, Lochy, Aliette, and Macchi Cassia, Viola
- Published
- 2023
6. ManyBabies 5: A large-scale investigation of the proposed shift from familiarity preference to novelty preference in infant looking time
- Author
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Kosie, J., Zettersten, M., Abu-Zhaya, R., Amso, D., Babineau, M., Baumgartne, H., Bazhydai, r., Belia, M., Benavides, S., Bergmann, C., Berteletti, I., Black, A., Borges, P., Borovsky, A., Byers-Heinlein, K., Cabrera, L., Calignano, G., Cao, A., Cox, C., Ben, R., Dautriche, I., DeBolt, M., Exner, A., Fisher-Thompson, D., Frank, M., Gönül, G., Gonzalez-Gomez, N., Grosse Wiesmann, C., Hamlin, K., Havron, N., Hochmann, J., Hoehl, S., Houston-Price, C., Kachergis, G., Kaldy, Z., Kingo, O., Ko, E., Kong, S., Krøjgaard, P., Liu, S., Lu, H., Maganti, M., Mather, E., Mayor, J., McMillan, B., Molnar, M., Moreau, D., Moriguchi, Y., Moulson, M., Mueller, J., Oakes, L., Peperkamp, S., Peykarjou, S., Taveira, M., Raz, P., Requena, P., Rocha-Hidalgo, J., Saffran, J., Schaetz, C., Schuwerk, T., Shinskey, J., Simpson, E., Singh, L., Smolak, E., Soderstrom, M., Sonne, T., Ssemata, A., Visser, I., Holzen, K., Waxman, S., Westermann, G., White, K., Woodruff, K., Katharina, C., Henriette, Z., Lucie, Z., Zorana, Z., Casey, Z., and Lew-Williams
- Abstract
Much of our basic understanding of cognitive and social processes in infancy relies on measures of looking time, and specifically on infants’ visual preference for a novel or familiar stimulus. However, despite being the foundation of many behavioral tasks in infant research, the determinants of infants’ visual preferences are poorly understood, and differences in the expression of preferences can be difficult to interpret. In this large-scale study, we test predictions from the Hunter and Ames model of infants' visual preferences. We investigate the effects of three factors predicted by this model to determine infants’ preference for novel versus familiar stimuli: age, stimulus familiarity, and stimulus complexity. Drawing from a large and diverse sample of infant participants (N = XX), this study will provide crucial empirical evidence for a robust and generalizable model of infant visual preferences, leading to a more solid theoretical foundation for understanding the mechanisms that underlie infants’ responses in common behavioral paradigms. Moreover, our findings will guide future studies that rely on infants' visual preferences to measure cognitive and social processes.
- Published
- 2023
7. The role of social signals in segmenting observed actions in 18-month-old children
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Kliesch, C., Parise, E., Reid, V., Hoehl, S., Kliesch, C., Parise, E., Reid, V., and Hoehl, S.
- Abstract
Learning about actions requires children to identify the boundaries of an action and its units. Whereas some action units are easily identified, parents can support children's action learning by adjusting the presentation and using social signals. However, currently, little is understood regarding how children use these signals to learn actions. In the current study, we investigate the possibility that communicative signals are a particularly suitable cue for segmenting events. We investigated this hypothesis by presenting 18-month-old children (N = 60) with short action sequences consisting of toy animals either hopping or sliding across a board into a house, but interrupting this two-step sequence either (a) using an ostensive signal as a segmentation cue, (b) using a non-ostensive segmentation cue and (c) without additional segmentation information between the actions. Marking the boundary using communicative signals increased children's imitation of the less salient sliding action. Imitation of the hopping action remained unaffected. Crucially, marking the boundary of both actions using a non-communicative control condition did not increase imitation of either action. Communicative signals might be particularly suitable in segmenting non-salient actions that would otherwise be perceived as part of another action or as non-intentional. These results provide evidence of the importance of ostensive signals at event boundaries in scaffolding children's learning.
- Published
- 2022
8. The role of mother-infant emotional synchrony in speech processing in 9-month-old infants
- Author
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Vanoncini, M, Boll-Avetisyan, N, Elsner, B, Hoehl, S, Kayhan, E, Vanoncini, Monica, Boll-Avetisyan, Natalie, Elsner, Birgit, Hoehl, Stefanie, Kayhan, Ezgi, Vanoncini, M, Boll-Avetisyan, N, Elsner, B, Hoehl, S, Kayhan, E, Vanoncini, Monica, Boll-Avetisyan, Natalie, Elsner, Birgit, Hoehl, Stefanie, and Kayhan, Ezgi
- Abstract
Rhythmicity characterizes both interpersonal synchrony and spoken language. Emotions and language are forms of interpersonal communication, which interact with each other throughout development. We investigated whether and how emotional synchrony between mothers and their 9-month-old infants relates to infants’ word segmentation as an early marker of language development. Twenty-six 9-month-old infants and their German-speaking mothers took part in the study. To measure emotional synchrony, we coded positive, neutral and negative emotional expressions of the mothers and their infants during a free play session. We then calculated the degree to which the mothers’ and their infants’ matching emotional expressions followed a predictable pattern. To measure word segmentation, we familiarized infants with auditory text passages and tested how long they looked at the screen while listening to familiar versus novel words. We found that higher levels of predictability (i.e. low entropy) during mother-infant interaction is associated with infants’ word segmentation performance. These findings suggest that individual differences in word segmentation relate to the complexity and predictability of emotional expressions during mother-infant interactions.
- Published
- 2022
9. Limited neutralisation of the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron subvariants BA.1 and BA.2 by convalescent and vaccine serum and monoclonal antibodies
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Wilhelm, A., Widera, M., Grikscheit, K., Toptan, T., Schenk, B., Pallas, C., Metzler, M., Kohmer, N., Hoehl, S., Marschalek, R., Herrmann, E., Helfritz, F.A., Wolf, T., Goetsch, U., Ciesek, Sandra, and Publica
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Waning Immunity ,Omicron ,SARS-CoV-2 ,BA.1 ,BA.2 ,Sotrovimab - Abstract
Background: In recent months, Omicron variants of SARS-CoV-2 have become dominant in many regions of the world, and case numbers with Omicron subvariants BA.1 and BA.2 continue to increase. Due to numerous mutations in the spike protein, the efficacy of currently available vaccines, which are based on Wuhan-Hu 1 isolate of SARS-CoV-2, is reduced, leading to breakthrough infections. Efficacy of monoclonal antibody therapy is also likely impaired. Methods: In our in vitro study using A549-AT cells constitutively expressing ACE2 and TMPRSS2, we determined and compared the neutralizing capacity of vaccine-elicited sera, convalescent sera and monoclonal antibodies against authentic SARS-CoV-2 Omicron BA.1 and BA.2 compared with Delta. Findings: Almost no neutralisation of Omicron BA.1 and BA.2 was observed using sera from individuals vaccinated with two doses 6 months earlier, regardless of the type of vaccine taken. Shortly after the booster dose, most sera from triple BNT162b2-vaccinated individuals were able to neutralise both Omicron variants. In line with waning antibody levels three months after the booster, only weak residual neutralisation was observed for BA.1 (26%, n = 34, 0 median NT50) and BA.2 (44%, n = 34, 0 median NT50). In addition, BA.1 but not BA.2 was resistant to the neutralising monoclonal antibodies casirivimab/imdevimab, while BA.2 exhibited almost a complete evasion from the neutralisation induced by sotrovimab. Interpretation: Both SARS-CoV-2 Omicron subvariants BA.1 and BA.2 escape antibody-mediated neutralisation elicited by vaccination, previous infection with SARS-CoV-2, and monoclonal antibodies. Waning immunity renders the majority of tested sera obtained three months after booster vaccination negative in BA.1 and BA.2 neutralisation. Omicron subvariant specific resistance to the monoclonal antibodies casirivimab/imdevimab and sotrovimab emphasizes the importance of genotype-surveillance and guided application. Funding: This study was supported in part by the Goethe-Corona-Fund of the Goethe University Frankfurt (M.W.) and the Federal Ministry of Education and Research (COVIDready; grant 02WRS1621C (M.W.).
- Published
- 2022
10. Longitudinal Testing for Respiratory and Gastrointestinal Shedding of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) in Day Care Centers in Hesse, Germany
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Hoehl, S., Kreutzer, E., Schenk, B., Westhaus, S., Foppa, I., Herrmann, E., Ettrich, I., Leondaraki, M., Schaible, A., Rudych, O., Rabenau, H., Berger, A., Ciesek, S., and Publica
- Abstract
Background: With the pandemic of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) ongoing in Europe in June 2020, day care centers were reopened in the state of Hesse, Germany, after the lockdown. The role young children play in the dynamics of the transmission was unknown. Methods: We conducted a longitudinal study over 12 weeks and 2 days (18 June 2020-10 September 2020) to screen attendees and staff from day care centers in the state of Hesse, Germany, for both respiratory and gastrointestinal shedding of SARS-CoV-2. A total of 859 children (age range, 3 months-8 years) and 376 staff members from 50 day care centers, which were chosen representatively from throughout the state, participated in the study. Parents were asked to collect both a buccal mucosa and an anal swab from their children once a week. Staff were asked to self-Administer the swabs. Reverse transcriptas polymerase chain reaction for SARS-CoV-2 was performed in a multiple-swab pooling protocol. Results: A total of 7366 buccal mucosa swabs and 5907 anal swabs were analyzed. No respiratory or gastrointestinal shedding of SARS-CoV-2 was detected in any of the children. Shedding of SARS-CoV-2 was detected in 2 staff members from distinct day care centers. One was asymptomatic at the time of testing, and one was symptomatic and did not attend the facility on that day. Conclusion: Detection of either respiratory or gastrointestinal shedding of SARS-CoV-2 RNA in children and staff members attending day care centers was rare in the context of limited community activity and with infection prevention measures in the facilities in place.
- Published
- 2021
11. Limited Neutralization of Authentic Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 Variants Carrying E484K in Vitro
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Widera, M., Wilhelm, A., Hoehl, S., Pallas, C., Kohmer, N., Wolf, T., Rabenau, H.F., Corman, V.M., Drosten, C., Vehreschild, M.J.G.T., Goetsch, U., Gottschalk, R., Ciesek, S., and Publica
- Abstract
Whether monoclonal antibodies are able to neutralize severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) variants of concern has been investigated using pseudoviruses. In this study we show that bamlanivimab, casirivimab, and imdevimab efficiently neutralize authentic SARS-CoV-2, including variant B.1.1.7 (alpha), but variants B.1.351 (beta) and P.2 (zeta) were resistant against bamlanivimab and partially resistant to casirivimab. Whether antibodies are able to neutralize severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) variantshas been investigated using pseudoviruses. We show that authentic SARS-CoV-2 carrying E484K were resistant against bamlanivimab and less susceptible to casirivimab, convalescent and vaccine-elicited sera.
- Published
- 2021
12. High-Frequency Self-Testing by Schoolteachers for Sars-Cov-2 Using a Rapid Antigen Test: Results of the Safe School Hesse study
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Hoehl, S., Schenk, B., Rudych, O., Göttig, S., Kohmer, N., Karaca, O., Toptan, T., Ciesek, S., and Publica
- Published
- 2021
13. Theta power and theta-gamma coupling during formation of novel representations in the infant brain
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Kayhan, E., Kliesch, C., Cichy, R.M., Hoehl, S., Köster, M., Kayhan, E., Kliesch, C., Cichy, R.M., Hoehl, S., and Köster, M.
- Abstract
Item does not contain fulltext, Building object representations is crucial for understanding the visual world, but it is not yet understood how infants start to form these representations. In adults, theta power is higher during presentation of stimuli that were later remembered, compared to those later forgotten (Friese et al., 2013), and the coupling between theta phase and gamma amplitude has been shown to be responsible for binding perceptual features to form representations. Theta-gamma coupling has been observed, for example, during the formation of visual associations (Köster, Finger, Graetz, Kater & Gruber, 2018), and was again higher for remembered than forgotten stimuli. Theta-gamma coupling has not yet been examined in infants due to methodological difficulties, such as contamination of the EEG signal by microsaccades (Köster, 2016) and low signal-to-noise ratio (Hoehl & Wahl, 2012). Since infants are in the process of building novel representations of their environment all the time, they are well-suited to show how early representations can begin to form. The current study introduces tools to solve these limitations and examines the neuronal processes related to forming new representations in 48 infants (6;12 - 8;04 months old). At the beginning of the experiment, infants were familiarised with four stimuli. They then saw interleaved trials showing either a familiar object or an entirely novel object. EEG was recorded continuously and wavelet transformed to time-frequency space. We expected that infants would show higher theta power for novel compared to familiar stimuli, and that theta-gamma coupling would be higher for novel compared to familiar stimuli. Our results show increased parietal and frontal theta for novel compared to familiar objects, in line with theta's role in building semantic conceptual networks. We were successful in removing microsaccade artifacts from the infant EEG and will further present the data on the cross-frequency coupling between theta phase and gamma
- Published
- 2021
14. Novel multiple swab method enables high efficiency in SARS‐CoV‐2 screenings without loss of sensitivity for screening of a complete population
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Schmidt, M., Hoehl, S., Berger, A., Zeichhardt, H., Hourfar, K., Ciesek, S., Seifried, E., and Publica
- Abstract
Background: In the pandemic, testing for severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) by real-time polymerase chain reaction is one of the pillars on which countermeasures are based. Factors limiting the output of laboratories interfere with the effectiveness of public health measures. Conserving reagents by pooling samples in low-probability settings is proposed but may cause dilution and loss of sensitivity. Blood transfusion services had experience in performance of high throughput nucleic acid testing (NAT) analysis and can support the national health system by screening of the inhabitants for SARS-COV-2. Methods: We evaluated a new approach of a multiple-swab method by simultaneously incubating multiple respiratory swabs in a single tube. Analytical sensitivity was constant up to a total number of 50 swabs. It was consequently applied in the testing of 50 symptomatic patients (5-sample pools) as well as 100 asymptomatic residents of a nursing home (10-sample pools). Results: The novel method did not cause false-negative results with nonsignificantly differing cycle threshold values between single-swab and multiple-swab NAT. In two routine applications, all minipools containing positive patient samples were correctly identified. Conclusions: The new method enables countries to increase the total number of testing significantly. The multiple-swab method is able to screen system relevant groups of employees frequently. The example in Germany shows that blood transfusion services can support general health systems with their experience in NAT and their high-throughput instruments. Screening of a huge number of inhabitants is currently the only option to prevent a second infection wave and enable exit strategies in many countries.
- Published
- 2020
15. Motor cortex activity during action observation predicts subsequent action imitation in human infants
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Köster, M., Langeloh, M., Kliesch, C., Kanngiesser, P., Hoehl, S., Köster, M., Langeloh, M., Kliesch, C., Kanngiesser, P., and Hoehl, S.
- Abstract
From early on, human infants acquire novel actions through observation and imitation. Yet, the neural mechanisms that underlie infants’ action learning are not well understood. Here, we combine the assessment of infants’ neural processes during the observation of novel actions on objects (i.e. transitive actions) and their subsequent imitation of those actions. Most importantly, we found that the 7–10 Hz motor cortex activity increased during action observation and predicted action imitation in 20-month-olds (n = 36). 10-month-olds (n = 42), who did not yet reliably imitate others’ actions, showed a highly similar neural activity pattern during action observation. The presence or absence of communicative signals did neither affect infants’ neural processing nor their subsequent imitation behavior. These findings provide first evidence for neural processes in the motor cortex that allow infants to acquire transitive actions from others ‒ and pinpoint a key learning mechanism in the developing brain of human infants.
- Published
- 2020
16. Die Virologie von SARS-CoV-2
- Author
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Hoehl, S., primary and Ciesek, S., additional
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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17. Rapid Categorization of Human and Ape Faces in 9-Month-Old Infants Revealed by Fast Periodic Visual Stimulation
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Peykarjou, S., Hoehl, S., Pauen, S., and Rossion, B.
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Male ,Science ,Infant ,Electroencephalography ,Hominidae ,Article ,body regions ,Pattern Recognition, Visual ,Face ,Visual Perception ,Animals ,Humans ,Medicine ,Female ,Photic Stimulation - Abstract
This study investigates categorization of human and ape faces in 9-month-olds using a Fast Periodic Visual Stimulation (FPVS) paradigm while measuring EEG. Categorization responses are elicited only if infants discriminate between different categories and generalize across exemplars within each category. In study 1, human or ape faces were presented as standard and deviant stimuli in upright and inverted trials. Upright ape faces presented among humans elicited strong categorization responses, whereas responses for upright human faces and for inverted ape faces were smaller. Deviant inverted human faces did not elicit categorization. Data were best explained by a model with main effects of species and orientation. However, variance of low-level image characteristics was higher for the ape than the human category. Variance was matched to replicate this finding in an independent sample (study 2). Both human and ape faces elicited categorization in upright and inverted conditions, but upright ape faces elicited the strongest responses. Again, data were best explained by a model of two main effects. These experiments demonstrate that 9-month-olds rapidly categorize faces, and unfamiliar faces presented among human faces elicit increased categorization responses. This likely reflects habituation for the familiar standard category, and stronger release for the unfamiliar category deviants.
- Published
- 2017
18. Spinnefeind: Angst vor Schlangen und Spinnen ist in uns angelegt
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Hoehl, S.
- Abstract
Schlangen und Spinnen – bei vielen Menschen rufen sie Angst und Ekel hervor. Auch in den Industrieländern ist die Furcht vor diesen Tieren weit verbreitet, obwohl man dort kaum mit ihnen in Kontakt kommt. Bisher war umstritten, ob diese Abneigung angeboren oder erlernt ist. Wissenschaftlerinnen am Max-Planck-Institut für Kognitions- und Neurowissenschaften (MPI CBS) in Leipzig und an der Uppsala University haben nun herausgefunden, dass sie in uns angelegt ist: Bereits sechs Monate alte Babys reagieren gestresst beim Anblick dieser Tiere – lange bevor sie diese Reaktion gelernt haben könnten.
- Published
- 2017
19. Itsy Bitsy Spider…: Infants React with Increased Arousal to Spiders and Snakes
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Hoehl, S., Hellmer, K., Johansson, M., and Gredebäck, G.
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Psykologi ,General Commentary ,infants ,snakes ,infant ,complex mixtures ,pupil dilation ,spiders ,ancient threats ,pupillary dilation ,arousal ,evolution ,fear ,Psychology ,General Psychology ,Original Research - Abstract
Attention biases have been reported for ancestral threats like spiders and snakes in infants, children, and adults. However, it is currently unclear whether these stimuli induce increased physiological arousal in infants. Here, 6-month-old infants were presented with pictures of spiders and flowers (Study 1, within-subjects), or snakes and fish (Study 1, within-subjects; Study 2, between-subjects). Infants' pupillary responses linked to activation of the noradrenergic system were measured. Infants reacted with increased pupillary dilation indicating arousal to spiders and snakes compared with flowers and fish. Results support the notion of an evolved preparedness for developing fear of these ancestral threats.
- Published
- 2017
20. Repetition adaptation for individual human faces in 9-month-old infants? An ERP study
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Peykarjou, S., primary, Pauen, S., additional, and Hoehl, S., additional
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- 2014
- Full Text
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21. Setting the Frame: The Human Brain Activates a Basic Low-Frequency Network for Language Processing
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Lohmann, G., Hoehl, S., Brauer, J., Danielmeier, C., Bornkessel, I.D., Bahlmann, J., Turner, R., Friederici, A.D., Lohmann, G., Hoehl, S., Brauer, J., Danielmeier, C., Bornkessel, I.D., Bahlmann, J., Turner, R., and Friederici, A.D.
- Abstract
Contains fulltext : 90159.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access), Low-frequency fluctuations (LFFs) are a major source of variation in fMRI data. This has been established in numerous experiments-particularly in the resting state. Here we investigate LFFs in a task-dependent setting. We hypothesized that LFFs may contain information about cognitive networks that are specific to the overall task domain without being time locked to stimulus onsets. We analyzed data of 6 fMRI experiments, 4 of which belonged to the language domain. After regressing out specifics of the experimental design and low-pass filtering (< 0.1 Hz), we found that the 4 language experiments produced a correlational pattern that was not present in the 2 nonlanguage studies. Specifically, a region in the posterior part of the left superior temporal sulcus/gyrus was consistently correlated with both the left Brodmann's area 44 and the left frontal operculum in all 4 language studies, whereas this correlation was not found in the 2 other experiments. This finding indicates the existence of a basic network that acts as a general framework for language processing. In contrast to networks obtained by a conventional conjunction analysis of activation maps, this network is independent of experimental specifics such as stimulus onsets and exists in the low-frequency range.
- Published
- 2010
22. Neural mechanisms of joint attention in infancy
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Striano, T, Reid, V M, Hoehl, S, Striano, T, Reid, V M, and Hoehl, S
- Abstract
One of the key transitions in early cognitive development is from participating in face-to-face interactions to engaging in joint attention exchanges. It is known that the ability to jointly attend with another person to an object is essential for the development of abilities such as language in later life. Strikingly, little is known about the function of joint attention in infants in the first year. We developed a novel interactive-live paradigm to assess the neural mechanisms of joint attention in 9-month-old infants. An adult interacted with each infant, and infants' electrical brain activity was measured in two contexts. In the joint attention context, a live adult gazed at the infants' face and then to a computer displayed novel object. In the non-joint attention context the adult gazed only to the novel object. We found that the negative component of the infant event-related potential (ERP), a neural correlate indexing attentional processes, was enhanced in amplitude during the processing of objects when infants were engaged in a joint attention interaction compared to a non-joint attention interaction. These results suggest that infants benefit from joint attention interactions by focusing their limited attentional resources to specific aspects of the surrounding environment.
- Published
- 2006
23. The perception of biological motion by infants: An event-related potential study
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Reid, V M, Hoehl, S, Striano, T, Reid, V M, Hoehl, S, and Striano, T
- Abstract
The current study investigates how human infants process and interpret human movement. Neural correlates to the perception of biological motion by 8-month-old infants were assessed. Analysis of event-related potentials (ERPs) resulting from the passive viewing of upright and inverted point-light displays (PLDs) depicting human movement indicated a larger positive amplitude in right parietal regions between 200 and 300 ms for observing upright PLDs when compared with observing inverted PLDs. These results show that infants at 8 months of age process upright and inverted PLDs differently from each other The implications for our understanding of infant visual perception are discussed. (c) 2005 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2006
24. Recording Infant ERP Data for Cognitive Research.
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Hoehl S and Wahl S
- Abstract
Researchers from different backgrounds have an increasing interest in investigating infant cognitive development using electroencephalogram (EEG) recordings. Although EEG measurements are suitable for infants, the method poses several challenges including setting up an infant-friendly, but interference-free lab environment and designing age-appropriate stimuli and paradigms. Certain specifics of infant EEG data have to be considered when deriving event-related potentials (ERPs) to investigate cognitive processes in the developing brain. The present article summarizes the practical aspects of conducting ERP research with infants and describes how researchers typically deal with the specific challenges entailed in this work. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
25. Recombinant soluble urokinase receptor as a scavenger for urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPa Inhibition of proflieration and invasion of human ovarian cancer cells
- Author
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Wilhelm, O., Weidle, U., Hoehl, S., and Rettenberger, P.
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Editorial: Entrainment and responses to rhythmic stimulation during development
- Author
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Peykarjou, Stefanie, Hoehl, Stefanie, Leleu, Arnaud, Lochy, Aliette, Macchi Cassia, Viola, Peykarjou, S, Hoehl, S, Leleu, A, Lochy, A, and Macchi Cassia, V
- Subjects
FPVS ,M-PSI/04 - PSICOLOGIA DELLO SVILUPPO E PSICOLOGIA DELL'EDUCAZIONE ,frequency tagging ,oscillation ,M-PSI/02 - PSICOBIOLOGIA E PSICOLOGIA FISIOLOGICA ,development ,synchronization ,SSVEP ,General Psychology - Published
- 2023
27. Setting the Frame: The Human Brain Activates a Basic Low-Frequency Network for Language Processing
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Stefanie Hoehl, Ina Bornkessel-Schlesewsky, Gabriele Lohmann, Jörg Bahlmann, Jens Brauer, Robert Turner, Angela D. Friederici, Claudia Danielmeier, Lohmann, G, Hoehl, S, Brauer, J, Danielmeier, C, Bornkessel-Schlesewsky, Ina Deirdre, Bahlmann, J, Turner, R, and Friederici, AD
- Subjects
Adult ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Speech recognition ,Stimulus (physiology) ,Correlation ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Gyrus ,medicine ,Humans ,Child ,Dominance, Cerebral ,Evoked Potentials ,Language ,Cerebral Cortex ,Brain Mapping ,Language Tests ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Resting state fMRI ,Verbal Behavior ,Human brain ,Cognitive network ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Frontal Lobe ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Speech Perception ,Nerve Net ,Functional magnetic resonance imaging ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,Brodmann area - Abstract
Low-frequency fluctuations (LFFs) are a major source of variation in fMRI data. This has been established in numerous experiments-particularly in the resting state. Here we investigate LFFs in a task-dependent setting. We hypothesized that LFFs may contain information about cognitive networks that are specific to the overall task domain without being time locked to stimulus onsets. We analyzed data of 6 fMRI experiments, 4 of which belonged to the language domain. After regressing out specifics of the experimental design and low-pass filtering (
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- 2009
28. Peak alpha frequency is linked to visual temporal attention in 6-month-olds.
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Arioli M, Mattersberger M, Hoehl S, and Brzozowska A
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- Humans, Infant, Female, Male, Alpha Rhythm physiology, Saccades physiology, Photic Stimulation, Attention physiology, Electroencephalography, Visual Perception physiology
- Abstract
The temporal resolution of adults' visual attention has been linked to the frequency of alpha-band oscillations in electroencephalogram (EEG) signal, with higher Peak Alpha Frequency (PAF) being associated with better visual temporal processing skills. However, relatively less is known about neural mechanisms underlying individual differences in the temporal resolution of visual attention in infancy. This study investigated the role of PAF in visual temporal processing in early infancy. In a sample of 6-month-old infants (n = 62) we examined the relationship between PAF extracted from resting-state EEG, and saccadic latencies in a predictive cueing task where the appearance of a reward was predicted by higher or lower frequency of two flickering objects. Results showed that higher PAF was associated with shorter saccadic latencies in a condition with higher differences between the two flickering frequencies, speaking for the involvement of PAF in visual temporal attention in early development. Additionally, we found that infants were generally faster to orient to the reward in trials where both peripheral stimuli were flickering at relatively lower frequencies, roughly corresponding to the theta frequency band. Our findings support theoretical accounts highlighting the role of PAF in visual attention processing and extend this framework to early infancy., Competing Interests: Declarations Competing interests The authors declare no competing interests., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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29. He Who Seeks Finds (Bodily Signals): German Validation of the Interoceptive Attention Scale (IATS) and its Relationship with Subclinical Psychopathology.
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Tünte MR, Petzke TM, Brand S, Murphy J, Witthöft M, Hoehl S, Weymar M, and Ventura-Bort C
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- Humans, Female, Male, Adult, Young Adult, Reproducibility of Results, Germany, Depression diagnosis, Depression psychology, Middle Aged, Adolescent, Self Report, Anxiety diagnosis, Anxiety psychology, Affective Symptoms diagnosis, Affective Symptoms psychology, Psychopathology, Interoception physiology, Attention, Psychometrics
- Abstract
Alterations in interoception have been linked to psychopathology. Recent findings suggest that both the attention to and the accuracy of, interoceptive perceptions may be oppositely related to subclinical symptomatology. Thus, providing well-validated tools that tap into these interoceptive processes is crucial for understanding the relation between interoceptive processing and subclinical psychopathology. In the current study ( N = 642), we aimed to (1) validate the German version of the Interoceptive Attention Scale (IATS; Gabriele et al., 2022), and (2) test the differential association of self-reported interoceptive attention and accuracy with subclinical symptomatology, including alexithymia, depressive, and anxious symptomatology. We observed that a one-factor solution is a well-fitting model for the IATS. Further, the IATS showed good internal consistency, convergent, and divergent validity, but poor test-retest reliability. Self-reported interoceptive attention and accuracy were unrelated to each other. However, IATS scores were positively related to all measures of psychopathology (except depressive symptomatology), whereas self-reported interoceptive accuracy scores showed negative or nonsignificant relations with these. Our data suggest that the IATS is a good instrument to measure self-report interoceptive attention in the German population. Further, we highlight the need to distinguish between constructs of interoception to better understand the relation between interoception and psychopathology.
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- 2024
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30. Visualizing the invisible tie: Linking parent-child neural synchrony to parents' and children's attachment representations.
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Nguyen T, Kungl MT, Hoehl S, White LO, and Vrtička P
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- Humans, Female, Male, Child, Child, Preschool, Adult, Spectroscopy, Near-Infrared, Parents psychology, Object Attachment, Parent-Child Relations, Problem Solving physiology
- Abstract
It is a central tenet of attachment theory that individual differences in attachment representations organize behavior during social interactions. Secure attachment representations also facilitate behavioral synchrony, a key component of adaptive parent-child interactions. Yet, the dynamic neural processes underlying these interactions and the potential role of attachment representations remain largely unknown. A growing body of research indicates that interpersonal neural synchrony (INS) could be a potential neurobiological correlate of high interaction and relationship quality. In this study, we examined whether interpersonal neural and behavioral synchrony during parent-child interaction is associated with parent and child attachment representations. In total, 140 parents (74 mothers and 66 fathers) and their children (age 5-6 years; 60 girls and 80 boys) engaged in cooperative versus individual problem-solving. INS in frontal and temporal regions was assessed with functional near-infrared spectroscopy hyperscanning. Attachment representations were ascertained by means of the Adult Attachment Interview in parents and a story-completion task in children, alongside video-coded behavioral synchrony. Findings revealed increased INS during cooperative versus individual problem solving across all dyads (𝛸
2 (2) = 9.37, p = 0.009). Remarkably, individual differences in attachment representations were associated with INS but not behavioral synchrony (p > 0.159) during cooperation. More specifically, insecure maternal attachment representations were related to higher mother-child INS in frontal regions (𝛸2 (3) = 9.18, p = 0.027). Conversely, secure daughter attachment representations were related to higher daughter-parent INS within temporal regions (𝛸2 (3) = 12.58, p = 0.006). Our data thus provide further indication for INS as a promising correlate to probe the neurobiological underpinnings of attachment representations in the context of early parent-child interactions. RESEARCH HIGHLIGHTS: We assessed attachment representations using narrative measures and interpersonal neural synchrony (INS) during parent-child problem-solving. Dyads including mothers with insecure attachment representations showed higher INS in left prefrontal regions. Dyads including daughters with secure attachment representations showed higher INS in right temporo-parietal regions. INS is a promising correlate to probe the neurobiological underpinnings of attachment representations in the context of parent-child interactions, especially within the mutual prediction framework., (© 2024 The Authors. Developmental Science published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)- Published
- 2024
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31. Parental models and overimitation in 5-year-old children.
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Mackie L, Eickhoff LA, Nimpf E, Huber L, and Hoehl S
- Abstract
Individuals often copy another's causally irrelevant actions despite their inefficiency toward goals. The present study investigated the influence of model familiarity on this behavior-known as "overimitation"-with a two-phase overimitation task. We tested whether 5-year-old Austrian children ( N = 52, 28 males) would overimitate their parents more than a stranger when operating a novel puzzle box. First, an inefficient strategy was demonstrated by a parent (or stranger) before the child's first turn on the box; then, an efficient strategy was demonstrated by a stranger (or parent) before the child's second turn. Results showed that children who first saw their parent's inefficient strategy overimitated it slightly more than those who saw the stranger's. After the efficient demonstration, we observed a reduction in children's overimitation of their parent's (but not the stranger's) inefficient strategy. Comparisons to a no-model (baseline) condition revealed significantly higher overimitation scores for our parent-then-stranger and stranger-then-parent conditions in the first phase, but only for the stranger-then-parent condition in the second phase. We also observed children protesting against their parents' efficient demonstration (in favor of the stranger's inefficient demonstration). These results suggest (a) that overimitation can occur in two ways (supporting a dual-process theory) and (b) that children selectively overimitate depending on model familiarity. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).
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- 2024
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32. The Development of Global-Level Categorization: Frequency Tagging EEG Responses.
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Peykarjou S, Hoehl S, and Pauen S
- Abstract
Adults and infants form abstract categories of visual objects, but little is known about the development of global categorization. This study aims to characterize the development of very fast global categorization (living and non-living objects) and to determine whether and how low-level stimulus characteristics contribute to this response. Frequency tagging was used to characterize the development of global-level categorization in N = 69 infants (4, 7, 11 months), N = 22 children (5-6 years old), and N = 20 young adults. Images were presented in an oddball paradigm, with a category change at every fifth position (AAAABAAAABA…). Strong and significant high-level categorization was observed in all age groups, with reduced responses for phase-scrambled control sequences (R
2 = 0.34-0.73). No differences between the categorization of living and non-living targets were observed. These data demonstrate high-level visual categorization as living and non-living from four months to adulthood, providing converging evidence that humans are highly sensitive to broad categorical information from infancy onward., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflicts of interest.- Published
- 2024
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33. Coinfections and antimicrobial treatment in a cohort of falciparum malaria in a non-endemic country: a 10-year experience.
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Küpper-Tetzel CP, Idris R, Kessel J, Schüttfort G, Hoehl S, Kohmer N, Graf C, Hogardt M, Besier S, Wichelhaus TA, Vehreschild MJGT, Stephan C, and Wetzstein N
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- Humans, Anti-Bacterial Agents therapeutic use, Travel, Coinfection drug therapy, Coinfection epidemiology, Malaria, Falciparum drug therapy, Malaria, Falciparum epidemiology, Malaria, Communicable Diseases drug therapy, Antimalarials therapeutic use
- Abstract
Introduction: Falciparum malaria remains one of the deadliest infectious diseases worldwide. In Germany, it is mainly an imported infection among travellers. Rates of coinfection are often unknown, and a clinical rationale for the beneficial use of calculated antibiotic therapy in patients with malaria and suspected coinfection is lacking., Methods: We conducted an analysis of all in-patients treated with falciparum malaria at a German infectious diseases centre in vicinity to one of Europe's major airports for 2010-2019. Logistic regression and time-to-event analysis were used to evaluate predictors for bacterial coinfection, the use of antibacterial substances, as well as their influence on clinical course., Results: In total, 264 patients were included. Of those, 64% received an additional antibacterial therapy (n = 169). Twenty-nine patients (11.0%) were found to have suffered from a relevant bacterial coinfection, while only a small fraction had relevant bacteremia (n = 3, 1.4%). However, patients with severe malaria did not suffer from coinfections more frequently (p = 0.283). CRP levels were not a reliable predictor for a bacterial coinfection (OR 0.99, 95% CI 0.94-1.06, p = 0.850), while another clinical focus of infection was positively associated (OR 3.86, 95% CI 1.45-11.55, p = 0.010)., Conclusion: Although bacterial coinfections were rare in patients with malaria at our centre, the risk does not seem negligible. These data point rather towards individual risk assessment in respective patients than to general empiric antibiotic use., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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34. Investigating belief understanding in children in a nonverbal ambiguous displacement and communication setting.
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Guran CA, Lonardo L, Tünte M, Arzberger K, Völter CJ, Hoehl S, Huber L, and Lamm C
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- Adult, Child, Preschool, Humans, Animals, Dogs, Cues, Communication, Comprehension physiology, Theory of Mind
- Abstract
Finding ways to investigate false belief understanding nonverbally is not just important for preverbal children but also is the only way to assess theory of mind (ToM)-like abilities in nonhuman animals. In this preregistered study, we adapted the design from a previous study on pet dogs to investigate false belief understanding in children and to compare it with belief understanding of those previously tested dogs. A total of 32 preschool children (aged 5-6 years) saw the displacement of a reward and obtained nonverbal cueing of the empty container from an adult communicator holding either a true or false belief. In the false belief condition, when the communicator did not know the location of the reward, children picked the baited container, but not the cued container, more often than the empty one. In the true belief condition, when the communicator witnessed the displacement yet still cued the wrong container, children performed randomly. The children's behavior pattern was at odds with that of the dogs tested in a previous study, which picked the cued container more often when the human communicator held a false belief. In addition to species comparisons, because our task does not require verbal responses or relational sentence understanding, it can also be used in preverbal children. The children in our study behaved in line with the existing ToM literature, whereas most (but not all) dogs from the previously collected sample, although sensitive to differences between the belief conditions, deviated from the children. This difference suggests that using closely matched paradigms and experimental procedures can reveal decisive differences in belief processing between species. It also demonstrates the need for a more comprehensive exploration and direct comparison of the various aspects of false belief processing and ToM in different species to understand the evolution of social cognition., (Copyright © 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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35. Pediatric cancer patients vaccinated against SARS-CoV-2-a clinical and laboratory follow-up.
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Siebald B, Groll AH, Salou S, Boldt A, Seiffert S, Sack U, Reemtsma J, Jassoy C, Klusmann JH, Ciesek S, Hoehl S, and Lehrnbecher T
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- Humans, Child, Adolescent, SARS-CoV-2, Follow-Up Studies, Antibodies, Viral, Vaccination, COVID-19 prevention & control, Neoplasms therapy, Vaccines
- Abstract
Background: Vaccination against SARS-CoV-2 is recommended for cancer patients. However, long-term data on the effectiveness in the pediatric setting are lacking., Methods: Pediatric patients < 18 years on active treatment for cancer and without prior SARS-CoV-2 infection received three doses of an mRNA vaccine. The clinical course and humoral and cellular immunity were evaluated at the end of the follow-up period of ≥ 1 year after the third dose of vaccine., Results: SARS-CoV-2 infection occurred in 17 of 19 analyzed patients (median age 16.5 years) during the follow-up period (median 17 months), but no severe symptoms were seen. At ≥ 1 year after the last SARS-CoV-2 antigen exposure, 4 of 17 patients had received the recommended booster vaccine. At the end of the follow-up period, all evaluable 15 patients had anti-SARS-CoV-2 receptor-binding domain IgG antibodies. Twelve of the 15 patients had neutralizing antibody titers ≥ 1:10 against the Delta variant and 12/15 and 13/15 against the BA.1 and BA.5 variants, respectively. Specific T cells against SARS-CoV-2 antigens were seen in 9/13 patients., Conclusions: Most SARS-CoV-2-vaccinated pediatric cancer patients had SARS-CoV-2 infections and limited interest in booster vaccination. At 1 year after the last antigen exposure, which was mostly an infection, humoral immune responses remained strong., Trial Registration: German Clinical Trials Register DRKS00025254, May 26, 2021., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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36. The development of visual categorization based on high-level cues.
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Peykarjou S, Hoehl S, and Pauen S
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- Child, Adult, Infant, Female, Animals, Humans, Electroencephalography, Photic Stimulation, Pattern Recognition, Visual physiology, Cues
- Abstract
This study investigated the development of rapid visual object categorization. N = 20 adults (Experiment 1), N = 21 five to six-year-old children (Experiment 2), and N = 140 four-, seven-, and eleven-month-old infants (Experiment 3; all predominantly White, 81 females, data collected in 2013-2020) participated in a fast periodic visual stimulation electroencephalographic task. Similar categorization of animal and furniture stimuli emerged in children and adults, with responses much reduced by phase-scrambling (R
2 = .34-.73). Categorization was observed from 4 months, but only at 11 months, high-level cues enhanced performance (R2 = .11). Thus, first signs of rapid categorization were evident from 4 months, but similar categorization patterns as in adults were recorded only from 11 months on., (© 2023 The Authors. Child Development published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Society for Research in Child Development.)- Published
- 2024
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37. Theta power relates to infant object encoding in naturalistic mother-infant interactions.
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Michel C, Matthes D, and Hoehl S
- Subjects
- Infant, Female, Humans, Learning, Communication, Mother-Child Relations, Visual Perception physiology, Mothers
- Abstract
This study investigates infants' neural and behavioral responses to maternal ostensive signals during naturalistic mother-infant interactions and their effects on object encoding. Mothers familiarized their 9- to 10-month-olds (N = 35, 17 females, mainly White, data collection: 2018-2019) with objects with or without mutual gaze, infant-directed speech, and calling the infant's name. Ostensive signals focused infants' attention on objects and their mothers. Infant theta activity synchronized and alpha activity desynchronized during interactions compared to a nonsocial resting phase (Cohen' d: 0.49-0.75). Yet, their amplitudes were unrelated to maternal ostensive signals. Ostensive signals did not facilitate object encoding. However, higher infant theta power during encoding predicted better subsequent object recognition. Results strengthen the role of theta-band power for early learning processes., (© 2023 The Authors. Child Development published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Society for Research in Child Development.)
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- 2024
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38. Mother-infant social gaze dynamics relate to infant brain activity and word segmentation.
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Vanoncini M, Hoehl S, Elsner B, Wallot S, Boll-Avetisyan N, and Kayhan E
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- Infant, Female, Humans, Child Development, Brain, Language Development, Mothers, Mother-Child Relations
- Abstract
The 'social brain', consisting of areas sensitive to social information, supposedly gates the mechanisms involved in human language learning. Early preverbal interactions are guided by ostensive signals, such as gaze patterns, which are coordinated across body, brain, and environment. However, little is known about how the infant brain processes social gaze in naturalistic interactions and how this relates to infant language development. During free-play of 9-month-olds with their mothers, we recorded hemodynamic cortical activity of ´social brain` areas (prefrontal cortex, temporo-parietal junctions) via fNIRS, and micro-coded mother's and infant's social gaze. Infants' speech processing was assessed with a word segmentation task. Using joint recurrence quantification analysis, we examined the connection between infants' ´social brain` activity and the temporal dynamics of social gaze at intrapersonal (i.e., infant's coordination, maternal coordination) and interpersonal (i.e., dyadic coupling) levels. Regression modeling revealed that intrapersonal dynamics in maternal social gaze (but not infant's coordination or dyadic coupling) coordinated significantly with infant's cortical activity. Moreover, recurrence quantification analysis revealed that intrapersonal maternal social gaze dynamics (in terms of entropy) were the best predictor of infants' word segmentation. The findings support the importance of social interaction in language development, particularly highlighting maternal social gaze dynamics., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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39. Communicative signals during joint attention promote neural processes of infants and caregivers.
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Bánki A, Köster M, Cichy RM, and Hoehl S
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- Female, Infant, Humans, Communication, Attention physiology, Electroencephalography, Evoked Potentials, Visual, Caregivers
- Abstract
Communicative signals such as eye contact increase infants' brain activation to visual stimuli and promote joint attention. Our study assessed whether communicative signals during joint attention enhance infant-caregiver dyads' neural responses to objects, and their neural synchrony. To track mutual attention processes, we applied rhythmic visual stimulation (RVS), presenting images of objects to 12-month-old infants and their mothers (n = 37 dyads), while we recorded dyads' brain activity (i.e., steady-state visual evoked potentials, SSVEPs) with electroencephalography (EEG) hyperscanning. Within dyads, mothers either communicatively showed the images to their infant or watched the images without communicative engagement. Communicative cues increased infants' and mothers' SSVEPs at central-occipital-parietal, and central electrode sites, respectively. Infants showed significantly more gaze behaviour to images during communicative engagement. Dyadic neural synchrony (SSVEP amplitude envelope correlations, AECs) was not modulated by communicative cues. Taken together, maternal communicative cues in joint attention increase infants' neural responses to objects, and shape mothers' own attention processes. We show that communicative cues enhance cortical visual processing, thus play an essential role in social learning. Future studies need to elucidate the effect of communicative cues on neural synchrony during joint attention. Finally, our study introduces RVS to study infant-caregiver neural dynamics in social contexts., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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40. Translation of Ontological Concepts from English into German Using Commercial Translation Software and Expert Evaluation.
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Noll R, Berger A, Facchinello C, Güngöze O, von Wagner M, Hoehl S, Neff M, Storf H, and Schaaf J
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- Humans, Software, Language, Allied Health Personnel
- Abstract
Medical ontologies are mostly available in English. This presents a language barrier that is a limitation in research and automated processing of patient data. The manual translation of ontologies is complex and time-consuming. However, there are commercial translation tools that have shown promising results in the field of medical terminology translation. The aim of this study is to translate selected terms of the Human Phenotype Ontology (HPO) from English into German using commercial translators. Six medical experts evaluated the translation candidates in an iterative process. The results show commercial translators, with DeepL in the lead, provide translations that are positively evaluated by experts. With a broader study scope and additional optimization techniques, commercial translators could support and facilitate the process of translating medical ontologies.
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- 2024
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41. Rhythmic visual stimulation as a window into early brain development: A systematic review.
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Köster M, Brzozowska A, Bánki A, Tünte M, Ward EK, and Hoehl S
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- Humans, Child, Photic Stimulation, Brain, Attention physiology, Visual Perception physiology, Electroencephalography, Evoked Potentials, Visual
- Abstract
Rhythmic visual stimulation (RVS), the periodic presentation of visual stimuli to elicit a rhythmic brain response, is increasingly applied to reveal insights into early neurocognitive development. Our systematic review identified 69 studies applying RVS in 0- to 6-year-olds. RVS has long been used to study the development of the visual system and applications have more recently been expanded to uncover higher cognitive functions in the developing brain, including overt and covert attention, face and object perception, numeral cognition, and predictive processing. These insights are owed to the unique benefits of RVS, such as the targeted frequency and stimulus-specific neural responses, as well as a remarkable signal-to-noise ratio. Yet, neural mechanisms underlying the RVS response are still poorly understood. We discuss critical challenges and avenues for future research, and the unique potentials the method holds. With this review, we provide a resource for researchers interested in the breadth of developmental RVS research and hope to inspire the future use of this cutting-edge method in developmental cognitive neuroscience., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest There are no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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42. Sing to me, baby: Infants show neural tracking and rhythmic movements to live and dynamic maternal singing.
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Nguyen T, Reisner S, Lueger A, Wass SV, Hoehl S, and Markova G
- Subjects
- Infant, Female, Child, Humans, Mothers, Brain, Movement, Head, Singing physiology
- Abstract
Infant-directed singing has unique acoustic characteristics that may allow even very young infants to respond to the rhythms carried through the caregiver's voice. The goal of this study was to examine neural and movement responses to live and dynamic maternal singing in 7-month-old infants and their relation to linguistic development. In total, 60 mother-infant dyads were observed during two singing conditions (playsong and lullaby). In Study 1 (n = 30), we measured infant EEG and used an encoding approach utilizing ridge regressions to measure neural tracking. In Study 2 (n =40), we coded infant rhythmic movements. In both studies, we assessed children's vocabulary when they were 20 months old. In Study 1, we found above-threshold neural tracking of maternal singing, with superior tracking of lullabies than playsongs. We also found that the acoustic features of infant-directed singing modulated tracking. In Study 2, infants showed more rhythmic movement to playsongs than lullabies. Importantly, neural coordination (Study 1) and rhythmic movement (Study 2) to playsongs were positively related to infants' expressive vocabulary at 20 months. These results highlight the importance of infants' brain and movement coordination to their caregiver's musical presentations, potentially as a function of musical variability., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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43. Using Augmented Reality Toward Improving Social Skills: Scoping Review.
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Mittmann G, Zehetner V, Hoehl S, Schrank B, Barnard A, and Woodcock K
- Abstract
Background: Augmented reality (AR) has emerged as a promising technology in educational settings owing to its engaging nature. However, apart from applications aimed at the autism spectrum disorder population, the potential of AR in social-emotional learning has received less attention., Objective: This scoping review aims to map the range of AR applications that improve social skills and map the characteristics of such applications., Methods: In total, 2 independent researchers screened 2748 records derived from 3 databases in December 2021-PubMed, IEEE Xplore, and ACM Guide to Computing Literature. In addition, the reference lists of all the included records and existing reviews were screened. Records that had developed a prototype with the main outcome of improving social skills were included in the scoping review. Included records were narratively described for their content regarding AR and social skills, their target populations, and their outcomes. Evaluation studies were assessed for methodological quality., Results: A total of 17 records met the inclusion criteria for this study. Overall, 10 records describe applications for children with autism, primarily teaching about reading emotions in facial expressions; 7 records describe applications for a general population, targeting both children and adults, with a diverse range of outcome goals. The methodological quality of evaluation studies was found to be weak., Conclusions: Most applications are designed to be used alone, although AR is well suited to facilitating real-world interactions during a digital experience, including interactions with other people. Therefore, future AR applications could endorse social skills in a general population in more complex group settings., (©Gloria Mittmann, Vanessa Zehetner, Stefanie Hoehl, Beate Schrank, Adam Barnard, Kate Woodcock. Originally published in JMIR Serious Games (https://games.jmir.org), 20.09.2023.)
- Published
- 2023
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44. A multi-site German validation of the Interoceptive Accuracy Scale and its relation to psychopathological symptom burden.
- Author
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Brand S, Meis AC, Tünte MR, Murphy J, Woller JP, Jungmann SM, Witthöft M, Hoehl S, Weymar M, Hermann C, and Ventura-Bort C
- Abstract
Altered interoception is thought to be implicated in the development of psychopathology. Recent proposals highlight the need to differentiate between dimensions of interoception to better understand its relation to mental health. Here, we validated a German version of the Interoceptive Accuracy Scale (IAS) and investigated the relationship between IAS scores and clinical outcomes, across seven samples from four research centers (N = 3462). The German IAS version was best explained by a one-factor structure that showed acceptable psychometric properties. We replicated previous findings showing a negative association between IAS scores and measures of alexithymia. IAS scores were negatively related to measures of clinical symptomatology (e.g., anxiety, depressive, and somatoform symptoms) and neurotic traits. These findings suggest that the German IAS is a reliable and valid instrument for subjective interoceptive accuracy. Results emphasize the importance of distinguishing between dimensions of interoception to understand its potential modulatory and protective role in psychopathology., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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45. The impact of pandemic restrictive visiting policies on infant wellbeing in a NICU.
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Giordano V, Fuiko R, Witting A, Unterasinger L, Steinbauer P, Bajer J, Farr A, Hoehl S, Deindl P, Olischar M, Berger A, and Klebermass-Schrehof K
- Subjects
- Humans, Infant, Newborn, Retrospective Studies, Pandemics, SARS-CoV-2, Communicable Disease Control, Policy, Intensive Care Units, Neonatal, COVID-19
- Abstract
Background: Given the countrywide lockdown in the first pandemic period and the respective Hospital restrictive policies, we aimed to investigate if the SARS-COV-2 pandemic was associated to a reduced parental presence in the NICU and in which form this had an impact on infant wellbeing., Methods: Retrospective cohort study about altered NICUs parental presence (measured by number of visits and kangaroo care time) due to pandemic restrictive policies and its impact on infant wellbeing (measured through The Neonatal Pain Agitation and Sedation scale and nurses' descriptive documentation)., Results: Presence of both parents at the same time was significantly lower during pandemic. Contrary, maternal presence only and total kangaroo-care time were higher within the pandemic (163.36 ± 94.07 vs 122.71 ± 64.03; p = 0.000). Lower NPASS values were documented during the lookdown (1.28 ± 1.7 vs 1.78 ± 2.2; p = 0.000)., Conclusion: Data collected through the pandemic confirm the importance of parental presence for infants' wellbeing in a NICU setting., Impact: Parental support is an extremely important aspect for infants hospitalized in an intensive care unit. Their presence was limited in many NICUs worldwide during the SARS-COV-2 pandemic. This study confirm the importance of parental presence for infants' wellbeing also in a pandemic situation. Our results support a family-centered newborn individualized developmental care approach in the NICU., (© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to the International Pediatric Research Foundation, Inc.)
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- 2023
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46. Progressive loss of conserved spike protein neutralizing antibody sites in Omicron sublineages is balanced by preserved T cell immunity.
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Muik A, Lui BG, Quandt J, Diao H, Fu Y, Bacher M, Gordon J, Toker A, Grosser J, Ozhelvaci O, Grikscheit K, Hoehl S, Kohmer N, Lustig Y, Regev-Yochay G, Ciesek S, Beguir K, Poran A, Vogler I, Türeci Ö, and Sahin U
- Subjects
- Humans, Spike Glycoprotein, Coronavirus genetics, SARS-CoV-2, Antibodies, Neutralizing, Antibodies, Viral, T-Lymphocytes, COVID-19
- Abstract
Evolution of the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) Omicron variant has led to the emergence of sublineages with different patterns of neutralizing antibody evasion. We report that Omicron BA.4/BA.5 breakthrough infection of individuals immunized with SARS-CoV-2 wild-type-strain-based mRNA vaccines results in a boost of Omicron BA.4.6, BF.7, BQ.1.1, and BA.2.75 neutralization but does not efficiently boost BA.2.75.2, XBB, or XBB.1.5 neutralization. In silico analyses showed that the Omicron spike glycoprotein lost most neutralizing B cell epitopes, especially in sublineages BA.2.75.2, XBB, and XBB.1.5. In contrast, T cell epitopes are conserved across variants including XBB.1.5. T cell responses of mRNA-vaccinated, SARS-CoV-2-naive individuals against the wild-type strain, Omicron BA.1, and BA.4/BA.5 were comparable, suggesting that T cell immunity against recent sublineages including XBB.1.5 may remain largely unaffected. While some Omicron sublineages effectively evade B cell immunity, spike-protein-specific T cell immunity, due to the nature of polymorphic cell-mediated immune responses, may continue to contribute to prevention/limitation of severe COVID-19 manifestation., Competing Interests: Declaration of interests U.S. and O.T. are management board members and employees at BioNTech SE. A.M., B.G.L., J.Q., M.B., A.T., J. Gordon, J. Grosser, I.V., and O.O. are employees at BioNTech SE. A.P. and H.D. are employees at BioNTech US. Y.F. and K.B. are employees of InstaDeep, Ltd. K.G., N.K., S.H., and S.C. are employees at the University Hospital, Goethe University Frankfurt. U.S., O.T., A.P., and A.M. are inventors on patents and patent applications related to RNA technology and COVID-19 vaccines. U.S., O.T., A.M., B.G.L., J.Q., M.B., A.T. A.P., H.D., J. Gordon, J. Grosser, I.V., and O.O. have securities from BioNTech SE. S.C. has received an honorarium for serving on a clinical advisory board for BioNTech SE., (Copyright © 2023 BioNTech SE. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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47. Matters of development and experience: Evaluation of dog and human emotional expressions by children and adults.
- Author
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Törnqvist H, Höller H, Vsetecka K, Hoehl S, and Kujala MV
- Subjects
- Humans, Adult, Dogs, Child, Animals, Child, Preschool, Anger, Attention, Arousal, Facial Expression, Emotions, Happiness
- Abstract
Emotional facial expressions are an important part of across species social communication, yet the factors affecting human recognition of dog emotions have received limited attention. Here, we characterize the recognition and evaluation of dog and human emotional facial expressions by 4-and 6-year-old children and adult participants, as well as the effect of dog experience in emotion recognition. Participants rated the happiness, anger, valence, and arousal from happy, aggressive, and neutral facial images of dogs and humans. Both respondent age and experience influenced the dog emotion recognition and ratings. Aggressive dog faces were rated more often correctly by adults than 4-year-olds regardless of dog experience, whereas the 6-year-olds' and adults' performances did not differ. Happy human and dog expressions were recognized equally by all groups. Children rated aggressive dogs as more positive and lower in arousal than adults, and participants without dog experience rated aggressive dogs as more positive than those with dog experience. Children also rated aggressive dogs as more positive and lower in arousal than aggressive humans. The results confirm that recognition of dog emotions, especially aggression, increases with age, which can be related to general dog experience and brain structure maturation involved in facial emotion recognition., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist., (Copyright: © 2023 Törnqvist et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.)
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- 2023
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48. Is Olfactory Testing a Useful Diagnostic Tool to Identify SARS-CoV-2 Infections Early? A Cross-Sectional and Longitudinal Analysis.
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Graf C, Wagener I, Grikscheit K, Hoehl S, Berger A, Wetzstein N, Dietz J, Dultz G, Michael F, Filmann N, Herrmann E, Tinnemann P, Goetsch U, and Ciesek S
- Abstract
Background: Genesis and the prognostic value of olfactory dysfunction (OD) in COVID-19 remain partially described. The objective of our study was to characterize OD during SARS-CoV-2 infection and to examine whether testing of OD may be a useful tool in clinical practice in order to early identify patients with SARS-CoV-2 infection., Methods: Olfactory function assessment was objectively carried out using the u-Smell-it
® test. In a cross-sectional study part, we evaluated this test in a control cohort of SARS-CoV-2 negative tested patients, who attended the University Hospital Frankfurt between May 2021 and March 2022. In a second longitudinal study part, sensitivity and specificity of OD was evaluated as a diagnostic marker of a SARS-CoV-2 infection in Frankfurt am Main, Germany in SARS-CoV-2 infected patients and their close contacts., Results: Among 494 SARS-CoV-2 negative tested patients, OD was detected in 45.7% and was found to be significantly associated with the male gender ( p < 0.001), higher age ( p < 0.001), cardiovascular and pulmonary comorbidities ( p < 0.001; p = 0.03). Among 90 COVID-19 positive patients, OD was found in 65.6% and was significantly associated with male gender and positive smoking status ( p = 0.04 each). Prevalence and severity of OD were significantly increased in infections with the Delta variant (B.1.617.2) compared to those with the Omicron variant (BA.1.1.529). Diagnostic sensitivity and specificity of OD for diagnosis of SARS-CoV-2 infection were 69% and 64%, respectively., Conclusion: OD is common in COVID-19 negative and positive tested patients with significantly different prevalence rates observed between different variants. Diagnostic accuracy of OD is not high enough to implement olfactory testing as a tool in diagnostic routine to early identify patients with a SARS-CoV-2 infection.- Published
- 2023
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49. Your turn, my turn. Neural synchrony in mother-infant proto-conversation.
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Nguyen T, Zimmer L, and Hoehl S
- Subjects
- Adult, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Infant, Brain, Language Development, Social Interaction, Mothers, Communication
- Abstract
Even before infants utter their first words, they engage in highly coordinated vocal exchanges with their caregivers. During these so-called proto-conversations, caregiver-infant dyads use a presumably universal communication structure-turn-taking, which has been linked to favourable developmental outcomes. However, little is known about potential mechanisms involved in early turn-taking. Previous research pointed to interpersonal synchronization of brain activity between adults and preschool-aged children during turn-taking. Here, we assessed caregivers and infants at 4-6 months of age ( N = 55) during a face-to-face interaction. We used functional-near infrared spectroscopy hyperscanning to measure dyads' brain activity and microcoded their turn-taking. We also measured infants' inter-hemispheric connectivity as an index for brain maturity and later vocabulary size and attachment security as developmental outcomes potentially linked to turn-taking. The results showed that more frequent turn-taking was related to interpersonal neural synchrony, but the strength of the relation decreased over the course of the proto-conversation. Importantly, turn-taking was positively associated with infant brain maturity and later vocabulary size, but not with later attachment security. Taken together, these findings shed light on mechanisms facilitating preverbal turn-taking and stress the importance of emerging turn-taking for child brain and language development. This article is part of a discussion meeting issue 'Face2face: advancing the science of social interaction'.
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- 2023
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50. First description of congenital toxoplasmosis after maternal coinfection with Toxoplasma gondii and severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2: a case report.
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Dao VT, Anagnostou A, Schlösser R, Rochwalsky U, Groß U, Hoehl S, Kempf VAJ, and Besier S
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- Male, Pregnancy, Infant, Newborn, Humans, Female, SARS-CoV-2, Cesarean Section, Immunoglobulin G, Immunoglobulin A, Immunoglobulin M, Toxoplasmosis, Congenital diagnosis, Toxoplasmosis, Congenital prevention & control, Toxoplasma, Coinfection, COVID-19, Premature Birth, Toxoplasmosis
- Abstract
Background: Congenital toxoplasmosis can be associated with serious clinical consequences from fetus to adulthood. Hence, early detection is required to minimize severe sequelae through appropriate therapy. We describe the first case of a congenital toxoplasmosis after maternal coinfection with Toxoplasma gondii and severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 and the challenging serological diagnosis of the disease in this context., Case Presentation: A Caucasian boy was born at 27 weeks 2 days of gestation by cesarean section due to maternal COVID-19-related respiratory failure. Postpartum serological screening of the mother revealed a previously unrecognized active Toxoplasma gondii infection. The premature child initially tested negative for anti- Toxoplasma gondii immunoglobulin A and M antibodies 1, 2 and 4 weeks after birth, whereas immunoglobulin G antibodies were only weakly positive with no evidence of child-specific production. Neither neurological nor ophthalmological abnormalities were detected. Approximately 3 months after birth, serological testing indicated a congenital toxoplasmosis by presence of immunoglobulin A and M, in combination with a child-specific immunoglobulin G synthesis. Additionally, cerebrospinal fluid was tested positive for Toxoplasma gondii DNA. Although no clinical manifestations of congenital toxoplasmosis were detected, an antiparasitic therapy was initiated to minimize the risk of late sequelae. There were no hints for a transplacental transmission of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2., Conclusion: This case raises the awareness of possible coinfections with the risk of transplacental transmission in cases of maternal coronavirus disease 2019. The report emphasizes the need for screening vulnerable patients for toxoplasmosis in general and especially in the context of pregnancy. It becomes evident that prematurity can complicate the serological diagnosis of congenital toxoplasmosis due to a delayed antibody response. Repeated testing is recommended to carefully monitor children at risk and especially those with a history of preterm birth., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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