18 results on '"Wass, S. V."'
Search Results
2. Infant Effortful Control Mediates Relations between Nondirective Parenting and Internalising-Related Child Behaviours in an Autism-Enriched Infant Cohort
- Author
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Smith, C. G., Jones, E. J. H., Wass, S. V., Pasco, G., Johnson, M. H., Charman, T., and Wan, M. W.
- Abstract
Internalising problems are common within Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD); early intervention to support those with emerging signs may be warranted. One promising signal lies in how individual differences in temperament are shaped by parenting. Our longitudinal study of infants with and without an older sibling with ASD investigated how parenting associates with infant behavioural inhibition (8-14 months) and later effortful control (24 months) in relation to 3-year internalising symptoms. Mediation analyses suggest nondirective parenting (8 months) was related to fewer internalising problems through an increase in effortful control. Parenting did not moderate the stable predictive relation of behavioural inhibition on later internalising. We discuss the potential for parenting to strengthen protective factors against internalising in infants from an ASD-enriched cohort. [The article was written with The BASIS Team.]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Infant Effortful Control Mediates Relations Between Nondirective Parenting and Internalising-Related Child Behaviours in an Autism-Enriched Infant Cohort
- Author
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Smith, C. G., Jones, E. J. H., Wass, S. V., Pasco, G., Johnson, M. H., Charman, T., and Wan, M. W.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Understanding allostasis: Early‐life self‐regulation involves both up‐ and down‐regulation of arousal.
- Author
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Wass, S. V., Mirza, F. U., and Smith, C.
- Subjects
- *
PATHOLOGICAL psychology , *INFANTS - Abstract
Optimal performance lies at intermediate autonomic arousal, but no previous research has examined whether the emergence of endogenous control associates with changes in children's up‐regulation from hypo‐arousal, as well as down‐regulation from hyper‐arousal. We used wearables to take day‐long recordings from N = 58, 12‐month‐olds (60% white/58% female); and, in the same infants, we measured self‐regulation in the lab with a still‐face paradigm. Overall, our findings suggest that infants who showed more self‐regulatory behaviors in the lab were more likely to actively change their behaviors in home settings moment‐by‐moment “on the fly” following changes in autonomic arousal, and that these changes result in up‐ as well as down‐regulation. Implications for the role of atypical self‐regulation in later psychopathology are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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5. Training Attentional Control and Working Memory--Is Younger, Better?
- Author
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Wass, S. V., Scerif, G., and Johnson, M. H.
- Abstract
Authors have argued that various forms of interventions may be more effective in younger children. Is cognitive training also more effective, the earlier the training is applied? We review evidence suggesting that functional neural networks, including those subserving attentional control, may be more unspecialised and undifferentiated earlier in development. We also discuss evidence suggesting that certain skills such as attentional control may be important as "hub" cognitive domains, gating the subsequent acquisition of skills in other areas. Both of these factors suggest that attentional training administered to younger individuals ought to be relatively more effective in improving cognitive functioning across domains. We evaluate studies that have administered forms of cognitive training targeting various subcomponents of attention and the closely related domain of working memory, and we contrast their reported transfer to distal cognitive domains as a function of the age of the participants. Although negative findings continue to be common in this literature we find that cognitive training applied to younger individuals tends to lead to significantly more widespread transfer of training effects. We conclude that future work in this area should concentrate on understanding early intensive training, and discuss a number of practical steps that might help to achieve this aim. (Contains 1 table and 3 figures.)
- Published
- 2012
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6. Infant Effortful Control Mediates Relations Between Nondirective Parenting and Internalising-Related Child Behaviours in an Autism-Enriched Infant Cohort
- Author
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Smith, C, Jones, E, Wass, S, Pasco, G, Johnson, M, Charman, T, Wan, M, Baron-Cohen, S, Blasi, A, Bolton, P, Chandler, S, Cheung, C, Davies, K, Elsabbagh, M, Fernandes, J, Gammer, I, Garwood, H, Gliga, T, Green, J, Guiraud, J, Hudry, K, Liew, M, Lloyd-Fox, S, Maris, H, O'Hara, L, Pickles, A, Ribeiro, H, Salomone, E, Tucker, L, Volein, A, Smith C. G., Jones E. J. H., Wass S. V., Pasco G., Johnson M. H., Charman T., Wan M. W., Baron-Cohen S., Blasi A., Bolton P., Chandler S., Cheung C., Davies K., Elsabbagh M., Fernandes J., Gammer I., Garwood H., Gliga T., Green J., Guiraud J., Hudry K., Liew M., Lloyd-Fox S., Maris H., O'Hara L., Pickles A., Ribeiro H., Salomone E., Tucker L., Volein A., Smith, C, Jones, E, Wass, S, Pasco, G, Johnson, M, Charman, T, Wan, M, Baron-Cohen, S, Blasi, A, Bolton, P, Chandler, S, Cheung, C, Davies, K, Elsabbagh, M, Fernandes, J, Gammer, I, Garwood, H, Gliga, T, Green, J, Guiraud, J, Hudry, K, Liew, M, Lloyd-Fox, S, Maris, H, O'Hara, L, Pickles, A, Ribeiro, H, Salomone, E, Tucker, L, Volein, A, Smith C. G., Jones E. J. H., Wass S. V., Pasco G., Johnson M. H., Charman T., Wan M. W., Baron-Cohen S., Blasi A., Bolton P., Chandler S., Cheung C., Davies K., Elsabbagh M., Fernandes J., Gammer I., Garwood H., Gliga T., Green J., Guiraud J., Hudry K., Liew M., Lloyd-Fox S., Maris H., O'Hara L., Pickles A., Ribeiro H., Salomone E., Tucker L., and Volein A.
- Abstract
Internalising problems are common within Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD); early intervention to support those with emerging signs may be warranted. One promising signal lies in how individual differences in temperament are shaped by parenting. Our longitudinal study of infants with and without an older sibling with ASD investigated how parenting associates with infant behavioural inhibition (8–14 months) and later effortful control (24 months) in relation to 3-year internalising symptoms. Mediation analyses suggest nondirective parenting (8 months) was related to fewer internalising problems through an increase in effortful control. Parenting did not moderate the stable predictive relation of behavioural inhibition on later internalising. We discuss the potential for parenting to strengthen protective factors against internalising in infants from an ASD-enriched cohort.
- Published
- 2022
7. Anxious parents show higher physiological synchrony with their infants.
- Author
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Smith, C. G., Jones, E. J. H., Charman, T., Clackson, K., Mirza, F. U., and Wass, S. V.
- Subjects
AROUSAL (Physiology) ,PARENT-infant relationships ,PHYSIOLOGICAL adaptation ,PARENTING ,SEX distribution ,TRANSDUCERS ,ANXIETY ,ANXIETY disorders ,PARENTS - Abstract
Background: Interpersonal processes influence our physiological states and associated affect. Physiological arousal dysregulation, a core feature of anxiety disorders, has been identified in children of parents with elevated anxiety. However, little is understood about how parent–infant interpersonal regulatory processes differ when the dyad includes a more anxious parent. Methods: We investigated moment-to-moment fluctuations in arousal within parent-infant dyads using miniaturised microphones and autonomic monitors. We continually recorded arousal and vocalisations in infants and parents in naturalistic home settings across day-long data segments. Results: Our results indicated that physiological synchrony across the day was stronger in dyads including more rather than less anxious mothers. Across the whole recording epoch, less anxious mothers showed responsivity that was limited to 'peak' moments in their child's arousal. In contrast, more anxious mothers showed greater reactivity to small-scale fluctuations. Less anxious mothers also showed behaviours akin to 'stress buffering' – downregulating their arousal when the overall arousal level of the dyad was high. These behaviours were absent in more anxious mothers. Conclusion: Our findings have implications for understanding the differential processes of physiological co-regulation in partnerships where a partner is anxious, and for the use of this understanding in informing intervention strategies for dyads needing support for elevated levels of anxiety. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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8. Parsing eye-tracking data of variable quality to provide accurate fixation duration estimates in infants and adults
- Author
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Wass, S. V., Smith, T. J., and Johnson, M. H.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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9. Infant Effortful Control Mediates Relations Between Nondirective Parenting and Internalising-Related Child Behaviours in an Autism-Enriched Infant Cohort
- Author
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Smith, C, Jones, E, Wass, S, Pasco, G, Johnson, M, Charman, T, Wan, M, Baron-Cohen, S, Blasi, A, Bolton, P, Chandler, S, Cheung, C, Davies, K, Elsabbagh, M, Fernandes, J, Gammer, I, Garwood, H, Gliga, T, Green, J, Guiraud, J, Hudry, K, Liew, M, Lloyd-Fox, S, Maris, H, O'Hara, L, Pickles, A, Ribeiro, H, Salomone, E, Tucker, L, Volein, A, Smith C. G., Jones E. J. H., Wass S. V., Pasco G., Johnson M. H., Charman T., Wan M. W., Baron-Cohen S., Blasi A., Bolton P., Chandler S., Cheung C., Davies K., Elsabbagh M., Fernandes J., Gammer I., Garwood H., Gliga T., Green J., Guiraud J., Hudry K., Liew M., Lloyd-Fox S., Maris H., O'Hara L., Pickles A., Ribeiro H., Salomone E., Tucker L., Volein A., Smith, C, Jones, E, Wass, S, Pasco, G, Johnson, M, Charman, T, Wan, M, Baron-Cohen, S, Blasi, A, Bolton, P, Chandler, S, Cheung, C, Davies, K, Elsabbagh, M, Fernandes, J, Gammer, I, Garwood, H, Gliga, T, Green, J, Guiraud, J, Hudry, K, Liew, M, Lloyd-Fox, S, Maris, H, O'Hara, L, Pickles, A, Ribeiro, H, Salomone, E, Tucker, L, Volein, A, Smith C. G., Jones E. J. H., Wass S. V., Pasco G., Johnson M. H., Charman T., Wan M. W., Baron-Cohen S., Blasi A., Bolton P., Chandler S., Cheung C., Davies K., Elsabbagh M., Fernandes J., Gammer I., Garwood H., Gliga T., Green J., Guiraud J., Hudry K., Liew M., Lloyd-Fox S., Maris H., O'Hara L., Pickles A., Ribeiro H., Salomone E., Tucker L., and Volein A.
- Abstract
Internalising problems are common within Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD); early intervention to support those with emerging signs may be warranted. One promising signal lies in how individual differences in temperament are shaped by parenting. Our longitudinal study of infants with and without an older sibling with ASD investigated how parenting associates with infant behavioural inhibition (8–14 months) and later effortful control (24 months) in relation to 3-year internalising symptoms. Mediation analyses suggest nondirective parenting (8 months) was related to fewer internalising problems through an increase in effortful control. Parenting did not moderate the stable predictive relation of behavioural inhibition on later internalising. We discuss the potential for parenting to strengthen protective factors against internalising in infants from an ASD-enriched cohort.
- Published
- 2021
10. Anxious parents show higher physiological synchrony with their infants
- Author
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Smith, C. G., primary, Jones, E. J. H., additional, Charman, T., additional, Clackson, K., additional, Mirza, F. U., additional, and Wass, S. V., additional
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Temporal dynamics of arousal and attention in 12‐month‐old infants
- Author
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Wass, S. V., primary, Clackson, K., additional, and de Barbaro, K., additional
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- 2016
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12. Parsing eye-tracking data of variable quality to provide accurate fixation duration estimates in infants and adults
- Author
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Wass, S. V., primary, Smith, T. J., additional, and Johnson, M. H., additional
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. The development of the relationship between auditory and visual neural sensitivity and autonomic arousal from 6 m to 12 m.
- Author
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Daubney K, Suata Z, Marriott Haresign I, Thomas M, Kushnerenko E, and Wass SV
- Subjects
- Infant, Humans, Fear, Arousal, Reaction Time physiology, Electroencephalography methods, Evoked Potentials physiology, Visual Perception physiology
- Abstract
The differential sensitivity hypothesis argues that environmental sensitivity has the bivalent effect of predisposing individuals to both the risk-inducing and development-enhancing influences of early social environments. However, the hypothesis requires that this variation in environmental sensitivity be general across domains. In this study, we focused on neural sensitivity and autonomic arousal to test domain generality. Neural sensitivity can be assessed by correlating measures of perceptual sensitivity, as indexed by event-related potentials (ERP) in electrophysiology. The sensitivity of autonomic arousal can be tested via heart rate changes. Domain generality was tested by comparing associations in perceptual sensitivity across auditory and visual domains, and associations between sensitivity in sensory domains and heart rate. We contrasted ERP components in auditory (P3) and visual (P1, N290 and P4) detection-of-difference tasks for N = 68 infants longitudinally at 6 and 12 months of age. Domain generality should produce correlated individual differences in sensitivity across the two modalities, with higher levels of autonomic arousal associating with increased perceptual sensitivity. Having controlled for multiple comparisons, at 6 months of age, the difference in amplitude of the P3 component evoked in response to standard and deviant tones correlated with the difference in amplitude of the P1 N290 and P4 face-sensitive components evoked in response to fearful and neutral faces. However, this correlation was not found at 12 months of age. Similarly, autonomic arousal correlated with neural sensitivity at 6 months but not at 12 months. The results suggest bottom-up neural perceptual sensitivity is domain-general across auditory and visual domains and is related to autonomic arousal at 6 months but not at 12 months of age. We interpret the development of the association of these markers of ES within a neuroconstructivist framework and with respect to the concept of interactive specialisation. By 12 months of age, more experience of visual processing may have led to top-down endogenous attention mechanisms that process visual information in a way that no longer associates with automatic auditory perceptual sensitivity., 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. Published by Elsevier Ltd.)
- Published
- 2023
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14. Measuring the temporal dynamics of inter-personal neural entrainment in continuous child-adult EEG hyperscanning data.
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Marriott Haresign I, Phillips EAM, Whitehorn M, Goupil L, Noreika V, Leong V, and Wass SV
- Subjects
- Adult, Brain Mapping methods, Humans, Social Interaction, Brain physiology, Electroencephalography methods
- Abstract
Current approaches to analysing EEG hyperscanning data in the developmental literature typically consider interpersonal entrainment between interacting physiological systems as a time-invariant property. This approach obscures crucial information about how entrainment between interacting systems is established and maintained over time. Here, we describe methods, and present computational algorithms, that will allow researchers to address this gap in the literature. We focus on how two different approaches to measuring entrainment, namely concurrent (e.g., power correlations, phase locking) and sequential (e.g., Granger causality) measures, can be applied to three aspects of the brain signal: amplitude, power, and phase. We guide the reader through worked examples using simulated data on how to leverage these methods to measure changes in interbrain entrainment. For each, we aim to provide a detailed explanation of the interpretation and application of these analyses when studying neural entrainment during early social interactions., (Crown Copyright © 2022. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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15. Oscillatory entrainment to our early social or physical environment and the emergence of volitional control.
- Author
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Wass SV, Perapoch Amadó M, and Ives J
- Subjects
- Child, Humans, Attention physiology, Periodicity
- Abstract
An individual's early interactions with their environment are thought to be largely passive; through the early years, the capacity for volitional control develops. Here, we consider: how is the emergence of volitional control characterised by changes in the entrainment observed between internal activity (behaviour, physiology and brain activity) and the sights and sounds in our everyday environment (physical and social)? We differentiate between contingent responsiveness (entrainment driven by evoked responses to external events) and oscillatory entrainment (driven by internal oscillators becoming temporally aligned with external oscillators). We conclude that ample evidence suggests that children show behavioural, physiological and neural entrainment to their physical and social environment, irrespective of volitional attention control; however, evidence for oscillatory entrainment beyond contingent responsiveness is currently lacking. Evidence for how oscillatory entrainment changes over developmental time is also lacking. Finally, we suggest a mechanism through which periodic environmental rhythms might facilitate both sensory processing and the development of volitional control even in the absence of oscillatory entrainment., (Copyright © 2022 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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16. Automatic classification of ICA components from infant EEG using MARA.
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Marriott Haresign I, Phillips E, Whitehorn M, Noreika V, Jones EJH, Leong V, and Wass SV
- Subjects
- Adult, Artifacts, Child, Humans, Infant, Visual Perception, Electroencephalography, Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted
- Abstract
Automated systems for identifying and removing non-neural ICA components are growing in popularity among EEG researchers of adult populations. Infant EEG data differs in many ways from adult EEG data, but there exists almost no specific system for automated classification of source components from paediatric populations. Here, we adapt one of the most popular systems for adult ICA component classification for use with infant EEG data. Our adapted classifier significantly outperformed the original adult classifier on samples of naturalistic free play EEG data recorded from 10 to 12-month-old infants, achieving agreement rates with the manual classification of over 75% across two validation studies (n = 44, n = 25). Additionally, we examined both classifiers' ability to remove stereotyped ocular artifact from a basic visual processing ERP dataset compared to manual ICA data cleaning. Here, the new classifier performed on level with expert manual cleaning and was again significantly better than the adult classifier at removing artifact whilst retaining a greater amount of genuine neural signal operationalised through comparing ERP activations in time and space. Our new system (iMARA) offers developmental EEG researchers a flexible tool for automatic identification and removal of artifactual ICA components., (Copyright © 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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17. Elevated physiological arousal is associated with larger but more variable neural responses to small acoustic change in children during a passive auditory attention task.
- Author
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Wass SV, Daubney K, Golan J, Logan F, and Kushnerenko E
- Subjects
- Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Male, Acoustic Stimulation standards, Arousal physiology, Evoked Potentials, Auditory physiology, Stress, Physiological physiology
- Abstract
Little is known of how autonomic arousal relates to neural responsiveness during auditory attention. We presented N = 21 5-7-year-old children with an oddball auditory mismatch paradigm, whilst concurrently measuring heart rate fluctuations. Children with higher mean autonomic arousal, as indexed by higher heart rate (HR) and decreased high-frequency (0.15-0.8 Hz) variability in HR, showed smaller amplitude N250 responses to frequently presented (70%), 500 Hz standard tones. Follow-up analyses showed that the modal evoked response was in fact similar, but accompanied by more large and small amplitude responses and greater variability in peak latency in the high HR group, causing lower averaged responses. Similar patterns were also observed when examining heart rate fluctuations within a testing session, in an analysis that controlled for between-participant differences in mean HR. In addition, we observed larger P150/P3a amplitudes in response to small acoustic contrasts (750 Hz tones) in the high HR group. Responses to large acoustic contrasts (bursts of white noise), however, evoked strong early P3a phase in all children and did not differ by high/low HR. Our findings suggest that elevated physiological arousal may be associated with high variability in auditory ERP responses in young children, along with increased responsiveness to small acoustic changes., (Copyright © 2018 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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18. Tonic and phasic co-variation of peripheral arousal indices in infants.
- Author
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Wass SV, de Barbaro K, and Clackson K
- Subjects
- Accelerometry, Attention physiology, Humans, Infant, Arousal physiology, Autonomic Nervous System physiology, Head Movements physiology, Heart Rate physiology, Pupil physiology
- Abstract
Tonic and phasic differences in peripheral autonomic nervous system (ANS) indicators strongly predict differences in attention and emotion regulation in developmental populations. However, virtually all previous research has been based on individual ANS measures, which poses a variety of conceptual and methodlogical challenges to comparing results across studies. Here we recorded heart rate, electrodermal activity (EDA), pupil size, head movement velocity and peripheral accelerometry concurrently while a cohort of 37 typical 12-month-old infants completed a mixed assessment battery lasting approximately 20 min per participant. We analysed covariation of these autonomic indices in three ways: first, tonic (baseline) arousal; second, co-variation in spontaneous (phasic) changes during testing; third, phasic co-variation relative to an external stimulus event. We found that heart rate, head velocity and peripheral accelerometry showed strong positive co-variation across all three analyses. EDA showed no co-variation in tonic activity levels but did show phasic positive co-variation with other measures, that appeared limited to sections of high but not low general arousal. Tonic pupil size showed significant positive covariation, but phasic pupil changes were inconsistent. We conclude that: (i) there is high covariation between autonomic indices in infants, but that EDA may only be sensitive at extreme arousal levels, (ii) that tonic pupil size covaries with other indices, but does not show predicted patterns of phasic change and (iii) that motor activity appears to be a good proxy measure of ANS activity. The strongest patterns of covariation were observed using epoch durations of 40s per epoch, although significant covariation between indices was also observed using shorter epochs (1 and 5s)., (Copyright © 2015 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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