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  2. Fetal EEG - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fetal_EEG

    Fetal electroencephalography, also known as prenatal EEG includes any recording of electrical fluctuations arising from the brain of a fetus. Doctors and scientists use EEGs to detect and characterize brain activity, such as sleep states, potential seizures, or levels of a coma .

  3. Infant visual development - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Infant_visual_development

    The vision of infants under one month of age ranges from 6/240 to 6/60 (20/800 to 20/200). [4] By two months, visual acuity improves to 6/45 (20/150). By four months, acuity improves by a factor of 2 – calculated to be 6/18 (20/60) vision. As the infant grows, the acuity reaches the healthy adult standard of 6/6 (20/20) at six months. [5]

  4. Preferential looking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Preferential_looking

    The findings were that infants with Down’s syndrome were able to discriminate between novel and familiar visual stimuli but were around two months behind typical infant development. [ 3 ] Preferential looking experiments have been cited in support of hypotheses regarding a wide range of inborn cognitive capacities such as depth perception ...

  5. Baby Has $5 Million Surgery to Remove Left Side of Brain at ...

    www.aol.com/baby-5-million-surgery-remove...

    On Dec. 28, 2023, when Caper was 4 weeks old, he had his surgery. In the hour leading up to it, he suffered six seizures. Two weeks after the surgery, he was discharged from the hospital and ...

  6. 2-month-old baby appears to speak in jaw-dropping video

    www.aol.com/2-month-old-baby-appears-153912681.html

    Most children don't say their first word until the age of 1 but Helena Kordaé's son might be an exception.

  7. Electroencephalography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electroencephalography

    Wearable EEG aims to provide small EEG devices which are present only on the head and which can record EEG for days, weeks, or months at a time, as ear-EEG. Such prolonged and easy-to-use monitoring could make a step change in the diagnosis of chronic conditions such as epilepsy, and greatly improve the end-user acceptance of BCI systems. [123]

  8. Hypsarrhythmia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypsarrhythmia

    A comparison of an awake, resting (with activity), normal EEG with a hypsarrhythmia EEG. The hypsarrhythmia EEG is from a 4-month old girl with cryptogenic West syndrome. In it high amplitude waves and spikes are present, randomly appearing and with no topographical distribution identified; also, there is no frequency nor amplitude gradient ...

  9. Landau–Kleffner syndrome - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Landau–Kleffner_syndrome

    In many cases however, abnormalities in the EEG test has preceded language deterioration and improvement in the EEG tracing has preceded language improvement (this occurs in about half of all affected children). Many factors inhibit the reliability of the EEG data: neurologic deficits do not closely follow the maximal EEG changes in time. [6]