“…Greater relative right frontal EEG activation is thought to underlie the disposition towards negative affect and depression (see Davidson 1995;2000), poor emotion regulation (Fox 1994), and the processing of novel stimuli leading to a disruption of ongoing cognitive processes (Dawson 1994). These differences in hemispheric EEG activity may arise from lateralized cortical and subcortical innervation by neurotransmitter systems (Davidson 1995), including norepinephrine (Deleplanque, Delrue, Vitiello, & Neveu 1993;Kruglikov, Orlova, & Getsova 1992), dopamine (Sullivan & Gratton 1999;Tucker & Williamson 1984), and serotonin (Belcheva, Belcheva, Petkov, Hadjiivanova, & Petkov, 1997). Furthermore, greater right frontal EEG asymmetry has been associated with high levels of cortisol (Buss et al, 2003) and norepinephrine and low levels of dopamine in infants.…”