Article

Frequency-Specific Effects in Infant Electroencephalograms Do Not Require Entrained Neural Oscillations: A Commentary on Köster et al. (2019)

Details

Citation

Keitel C, Obleser J, Jessen S & Henry MJ (2021) Frequency-Specific Effects in Infant Electroencephalograms Do Not Require Entrained Neural Oscillations: A Commentary on Köster et al. (2019). Psychological Science, 32 (6), pp. 966-971. https://doi.org/10.1177/09567976211001317

Abstract
First paragraph: In our current efforts to understand how psychological phenomena arise from brain activity, neural oscillations have taken center stage. A wide range of findings has linked modulations of oscillatory power, phase, and frequency to various cognitive functions, such as attention, language, and memory (Wang, 2010). Exciting new research has recently focused on the developmental origins and trajectories of neural oscillations—how does the neural oscillatory landscape emerge over development (Schaworonkow & Voytek, 2021), and how do the relationships between oscillations and cognitive function in the adult brain come about?

Keywords
General Psychology

Journal
Psychological Science: Volume 32, Issue 6

StatusPublished
Publication date30/06/2021
Publication date online12/05/2021
Date accepted by journal02/02/2021
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/32651
PublisherSAGE Publications
ISSN0956-7976
eISSN1467-9280