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Dive into the research topics where Alexandra P. F. Key is active.

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Featured researches published by Alexandra P. F. Key.


Developmental Neuropsychology | 2005

Linking Brainwaves to the Brain: An ERP Primer

Alexandra P. F. Key; Guy Dove; Mandy J. Maguire

This article reviews literature on the characteristics and possible interpretations of the event-related potential (ERP) peaks commonly identified in research. The description of each peak includes typical latencies, cortical distributions, and possible brain sources of observed activity as well as the evoking paradigms and underlying psychological processes. The review is intended to serve as a tutorial for general readers interested in neuropsychological research and as a reference source for researchers using ERP techniques.


Environmental Health Perspectives | 2006

Smoking during Pregnancy Affects Speech-Processing Ability in Newborn Infants

Alexandra P. F. Key; Melissa Ferguson; Dennis L. Molfese; Kelley R. Peach; Casey Lehman; Victoria J. Molfese

Background Tobacco smoking during pregnancy is known to adversely affect development of the central nervous system in babies of smoking mothers by restricting utero–placental blood flow and the amount of oxygen available to the fetus. Behavioral data associate maternal smoking with lower verbal scores and poorer performance on specific language/auditory tests. Objectives In the current study we examined the effects of maternal smoking during pregnancy on newborns’ speech processing ability as measured by event-related potentials (ERPs). Method High-density ERPs were recorded within 48 hr of birth in healthy newborn infants of smoking (n = 8) and nonsmoking (n = 8) mothers. Participating infants were matched on sex, gestational age, birth weight, Apgar scores, mother’s education, and family income. Smoking during pregnancy was determined by parental self-report and medical records. ERPs were recorded in response to six consonant–vowel syllables presented in random order with equal probability. Results Brainwaves of babies of nonsmoking mothers were characterized by typical hemisphere asymmetries, with larger amplitudes over the left hemisphere, especially over temporal regions. Further, infants of nonsmokers discriminated among a greater number of syllables whereas the newborns of smokers began the discrimination process at least 150 msec later and differentiated among fewer stimuli. Conclusions Our findings indicate that prenatal exposure to tobacco smoke in otherwise healthy babies is linked with significant changes in brain physiology associated with basic perceptual skills that could place the infant at risk for later developmental problems.


Journal of Communication Disorders | 2011

Emotional Reactivity, Regulation and Childhood Stuttering: A Behavioral and Electrophysiological Study

Hayley S. Arnold; Edward G. Conture; Alexandra P. F. Key; Tedra A. Walden

UNLABELLED The purpose of this preliminary study was to assess whether behavioral and psychophysiological correlates of emotional reactivity and regulation are associated with developmental stuttering, as well as determine the feasibility of these methods in preschool-age children. Nine preschool-age children who stutter (CWS) and nine preschool-age children who do not stutter (CWNS) listened to brief background conversations conveying happy, neutral, and angry emotions (a resolution conversation followed the angry conversation), then produced narratives based on a text-free storybook. Electroencephalograms (EEG) recorded during listening examined cortical correlates of emotional reactivity and regulation. Speech disfluencies and observed emotion regulation were measured during a narrative immediately after each background conversation. Results indicated that decreased use of regulatory strategies is related to more stuttering in children who stutter. However, no significant differences were found in EEG measurements of emotional reactivity and regulation between CWS and CWNS or between emotion elicitation conditions. Findings were taken to suggest that use of regulatory strategies may relate to the fluency of preschool-age childrens speech-language output. LEARNING OUTCOMES The reader will be able to (1) describe emotional reactivity and regulation processes, (2) discuss evidence for or against the relations of emotional reactivity, regulation and stuttering, (3) understand how multiple measures can be used to measure emotional reactivity and regulation.


Developmental Neuropsychology | 2013

A One-Hour Sleep Restriction Impacts Brain Processing in Young Children Across Tasks: Evidence From Event- Related Potentials

Dennis L. Molfese; Anna Ivanenko; Alexandra P. F. Key; Adrienne S. Roman; Victoria J. Molfese; Louise O'Brien; David Gozal; Srinivas Kota; Caitlin M. Hudac

The effect of mild sleep restriction on cognitive functioning in young children is unclear, yet sleep loss may impact childrens abilities to attend to tasks with high processing demands. In a preliminary investigation, six children (6.6–8.3 years of age) with normal sleep patterns performed three tasks: attention (“Oddball”), speech perception (consonant–vowel syllables), and executive function (Directional Stroop). Event-related potentials (ERPs) responses were recorded before (Control) and following 1 week of 1-hour per day of sleep restriction. Brain activity across all tasks following Sleep Restriction differed from activity during Control Sleep, indicating that minor sleep restriction impacts childrens neurocognitive functioning.


Journal of Learning Disabilities | 2006

Below-Average, Average, and Above-Average Readers Engage Different and Similar Brain Regions While Reading

Dennis L. Molfese; Alexandra P. F. Key; Spencer D. Kelly; Natalie Cunningham; Shona Terrell; Melissa Ferguson; Victoria J. Molfese; Terri L. Bonebright

Event-related potentials (ERPs) were recorded from 27 children (14 girls, 13 boys) who varied in their reading skill levels. Both behavior performance measures recorded during the ERP word classification task and the ERP responses themselves discriminated between children with above-average, average, and below-average reading skills. ERP amplitudes and peak latencies decreased as reading skills increased. Furthermore, hemisphere differences increased with higher reading skill levels. Sex differences were also related to ERP amplitude variations across the scalp. However, ERPs recorded from boys and girls did not differ as a function of differences in the childrens reading levels.


Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience | 2014

Neural correlates of cross-modal affective priming by music in Williams syndrome

Miriam D. Lense; Reyna L. Gordon; Alexandra P. F. Key; Elisabeth M. Dykens

Emotional connection is the main reason people engage with music, and the emotional features of music can influence processing in other domains. Williams syndrome (WS) is a neurodevelopmental genetic disorder where musicality and sociability are prominent aspects of the phenotype. This study examined oscillatory brain activity during a musical affective priming paradigm. Participants with WS and age-matched typically developing controls heard brief emotional musical excerpts or emotionally neutral sounds and then reported the emotional valence (happy/sad) of subsequently presented faces. Participants with WS demonstrated greater evoked fronto-central alpha activity to the happy vs sad musical excerpts. The size of these alpha effects correlated with parent-reported emotional reactivity to music. Although participant groups did not differ in accuracy of identifying facial emotions, reaction time data revealed a music priming effect only in persons with WS, who responded faster when the face matched the emotional valence of the preceding musical excerpt vs when the valence differed. Matching emotional valence was also associated with greater evoked gamma activity thought to reflect cross-modal integration. This effect was not present in controls. The results suggest a specific connection between music and socioemotional processing and have implications for clinical and educational approaches for WS.


Psychophysiology | 2012

Influence of gestational age and postnatal age on speech sound processing in NICU infants

Alexandra P. F. Key; E. Warren Lambert; Judy L. Aschner; Nathalie L. Maitre

The study examined the effect of gestational (GA) and postnatal (PNA) age on speech sound perception in infants. Auditory event-related potentials (ERPs) were recorded in response to speech sounds (syllables) in 50 infant NICU patients (born at 24-40 weeks gestation) prior to discharge. Efficiency of speech perception was quantified as absolute difference in mean amplitudes of ERPs in response to vowel (/a/-/u/) and consonant (/b/-/g/, /d/-/g/) contrasts within 150-250, 250-400, 400-700 ms after stimulus onset. Results indicated that both GA and PNA affected speech sound processing. These effects were more pronounced for consonant than vowel contrasts. Increasing PNA was associated with greater sound discrimination in infants born at or after 30 weeks GA, while minimal PNA-related changes were observed for infants with GA less than 30 weeks. Our findings suggest that a certain level of brain maturity at birth is necessary to benefit from postnatal experience in the first 4 months of life, and both gestational and postnatal ages need to be considered when evaluating infant brain responses.


Journal of Child Neurology | 2012

Novel assessment of cortical response to somatosensory stimuli in children with hemiparetic cerebral palsy.

Nathalie L. Maitre; Zachary P. Barnett; Alexandra P. F. Key

The brain’s response to somatosensory stimuli is essential to experience-driven learning in children. It was hypothesized that advances in event-related potential technology could quantify the response to touch in somatosensory cortices and characterize the responses of hemiparetic children. In this prospective study of 8 children (5-8 years old) with hemiparetic cerebral palsy, both event-related potential responses to sham or air puff trials and standard functional assessments were used. Event-related potential technology consistently measured signals reflecting activity in the primary and secondary somatosensory cortices as well as complex cognitive processing of touch. Participants showed typical early responses but less efficient perceptual processes. Significant differences between affected and unaffected extremities correlated with sensorimotor testing, stereognosis, and 2-point discrimination (r > 0.800 and P = .001 for all). For the first time, a novel event-related potential paradigm shows that hemiparetic children have slower and less efficient tactile cortical perception in their affected extremities.


Developmental Neuropsychology | 2008

Dynamic Links Between Emerging Cognitive Skills and Brain Processes

Dennis L. Molfese; Victoria J. Molfese; Jennifer Beswick; Jill Jacobi-Vessels; Peter J. Molfese; Alexandra P. F. Key; Gillian Starkey

The goal of the present study was to investigate whether advanced cognitive skills in one domain impact the neural processing of unrelated skills in a different cognitive domain. This question is related to the broader issue of how cognitive-neurodevelopment proceeds as different skills are mastered. To address this goal, event-related brain potentials (ERPs) were used to assess linkages between cognitive skills of preschool children as reflected in their performance on a pre-reading screening test (Get Ready To Read) and their neural responses while engaged in a geometric shape matching task. Sixteen children (10 males) participated in this study. The children ranged from 46 to 60 months (SD = 4.36 months). ERPs were recorded using a 128-electrode high-density array while children attended to presentations of matched and mismatched shapes (triangles, circles, or squares). ERPs indicated that children with more advanced pre-reading skills discriminated between matched and mismatched shapes earlier than children with poorer pre-readings skills. The earlier discrimination effect observed in the advanced group was localized over the occipital electrode sites whereas in the Low Group such effects were present over frontal, parietal, and occipital sites. Modeled magnetic resonance images (MRIs) of the ERP component sources identified differences in neural generators between the two groups. Both sets of findings support the hypothesis that processing in a poorer-performing group is more distributed temporally and spatially across the scalp, and reflects the engagement of more distributed brain regions. These findings are seen as support for a theory of neural-cognitive development that is advanced in the present article.


Developmental Neuropsychology | 2003

Influence of Environment on Speech-Sound Discrimination: Findings From a Longitudinal Study

Dennis L. Molfese; Victoria J. Molfese; Alexandra P. F. Key; Spencer D. Kelly

Event-related potentials (ERPs) from 134 children were obtained at 3 and 8 years of age and recorded to a series of consonant-vowel speech syllables and their nonspeech analogues. The HOME inventory was administered to these same children at 3 and 8 years of age and the sample was divided into 2 groups (low vs. high) based on their HOME scores. Discriminant functions analyses using ERP responses to speech and non-speech analogues successfully classified HOME scores obtained at 3 and 8 years of age and discriminated between children who received low vs. high levels of stimulation for language and reading.

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Dennis L. Molfese

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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Victoria J. Molfese

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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Wendy L. Stone

University of Washington

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Nathalie L. Maitre

Nationwide Children's Hospital

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Elisabeth M. Dykens

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

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Guy Dove

University of Louisville

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Olena Chorna

Nationwide Children's Hospital

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