Sue Peters

Sue Peters

Jun 29, 2016

Group 6 Copy 115
2
Please wait...

About This Project

Infancy is an ideal time to study brain rhythms during sleep in humans. During the first year of life, infants' brains are rapidly changing. We’ve been perfecting our methods for two years and now need two additional E4 autonomic sensors to run a study with 15 infants, at three ages, characterizing the changes in two sleep brain rhythms: slow waves and sleep spindles, along with changes in autonomic sleep patterns, and cognitive, motor, and social-emotional development.

Blast off!

Browse Other Projects on Experiment

Related Projects

How do chimpanzees adapt to a savanna woodland in Tanzania?

75% of Tanzania’s chimpanzees live in open “savanna” woodlands. Considered a marginal habitat due to low...

How does taking Ritalin affect depersonalization-derealization disorder patients?

We are investigating Ritalin's role in alleviating symptoms of depersonalization-derealization (DPDR) disorder...

Using high-tech toys to improve foraging in captive rhinos

A Foobler is a toy that dispenses food when your pet plays with it. We want to build one for the San Francisco...

Backer Badge Funded