2014
DOI: 10.1007/s11065-014-9261-x
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Functional Plasticity in Childhood Brain Disorders: When, What, How, and Whom to Assess

Abstract: At every point in the lifespan, the brain balances malleable processes representing neural plasticity that promote change with homeostatic processes that promote stability. Whether a child develops typically or with brain injury, his or her neural and behavioral outcome is constructed through transactions between plastic and homeostatic processes and the environment. In clinical research with children in whom the developing brain has been malformed or injured, behavioral outcomes provide an index of the result… Show more

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Cited by 57 publications
(55 citation statements)
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References 234 publications
(282 reference statements)
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“…Age at brain insult may influence outcome and recovery of neurobehavioural skills (Anderson, Spencer-Smith, & Wood, 2011;Anderson et al, 2009;Jacobs, Harvey, & Anderson, 2007), although this is likely not a linear association, but rather influenced by critical periods during development, such that outcomes are dependent on neurological and cognitive development at the time of insult (Anderson et al, , 2011Crowe, Catroppa, Babl, Rosenfeld, & Anderson, 2012;Dennis, 1988;Dennis et al, 2014;Kolb, Pellis, & Robinson, 2004). It has been argued that neurocognitive skills emerging or developing at the time of insult are at heightened risk for persisting disruption, while established skills may experience transient disruption before recovering to levels that approximate pre-injury baseline (Dennis, 1988;Dennis et al, 2014).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Age at brain insult may influence outcome and recovery of neurobehavioural skills (Anderson, Spencer-Smith, & Wood, 2011;Anderson et al, 2009;Jacobs, Harvey, & Anderson, 2007), although this is likely not a linear association, but rather influenced by critical periods during development, such that outcomes are dependent on neurological and cognitive development at the time of insult (Anderson et al, , 2011Crowe, Catroppa, Babl, Rosenfeld, & Anderson, 2012;Dennis, 1988;Dennis et al, 2014;Kolb, Pellis, & Robinson, 2004). It has been argued that neurocognitive skills emerging or developing at the time of insult are at heightened risk for persisting disruption, while established skills may experience transient disruption before recovering to levels that approximate pre-injury baseline (Dennis, 1988;Dennis et al, 2014).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It has been argued that neurocognitive skills emerging or developing at the time of insult are at heightened risk for persisting disruption, while established skills may experience transient disruption before recovering to levels that approximate pre-injury baseline (Dennis, 1988;Dennis et al, 2014). Since pragmatic communication skills undergo protracted development through the early school years and into adolescence (Didus et al, 1999;Dumontheil, Apperly, & Blakemore, 2010;Gerrard-Morris et al, 2010), a critical period model would predict that these skills are at heightened risk for disruption during middle childhood, when they are undergoing rapid development and refinement.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Paralysis of the lower extremities is evident and related to the level of the developmental defect. Two-thirds of children with SBM also exhibit upper extremity impairments due to cerebellar structural changes [13,26]. Despite the ability to learn motor tasks, the ability to adapt tasks while learning a sequence of movements is impaired in this group of children.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The anterior lobe of the cerebellum is intact and enlarged in children with SBM while the posterior lobe of the cerebellum is reduced [13]. The reduction of the posterior cerebellum produces deficits in the cognitive part of the cerebellum.…”
Section: Martin S Austin Publishing Groupmentioning
confidence: 94%
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