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. 1987 Aug;44(1):64-79.
doi: 10.1016/0022-0965(87)90022-1.

The startle response and auditory temporal summation in neonates

The startle response and auditory temporal summation in neonates

T D Blumenthal et al. J Exp Child Psychol. 1987 Aug.

Abstract

The present study assessed temporal summation of transient and sustained stimuli in the startle eyeblink response system in neonates during quiet sleep. Subjects received 100-dB(A), fast-rising broadband noise bursts of two types: (a) single stimuli varying in duration from 20 to 100 ms and (b) pairs of 3-ms bursts presented at interpulse intervals corresponding to the single-stimulus durations. In addition, a single 3-ms pulse was used as an anchor point for both stimulus types. For startle amplitude, single stimuli were more effective than were paired stimuli, but the temporal summation functions were similar for the two types of stimuli. Response amplitude increased as stimulus duration/interval increased to 50 ms, but not beyond. For startle probability, temporal summation was similar for single and paired stimuli at 20 ms. Pairs of pulses were equally effective at 20, 35, and 50 ms, beyond which the second pulse was not effective. Increasing the duration of single stimuli from 20 to 35 ms resulted in increased probability, illustrating a contribution of sustained summation beyond that of transient summation. Response latency was generally greater for paired than for single stimuli. The results suggest that temporal summation of brief stimuli is deficient in the neonate. These data were compared to adult data from an analogous study, and suggest that the transient system is immature in infants, and that this immaturity is expressed differently by startle amplitude, probability, and latency.

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