Course Syllabus

The Developing Brain

DIS Logo

developing_brain_picture.png

Semester & Location:

Spring 2022 - DIS Stockholm

Type & Credits:

Elective Course - 3 credits

Major Disciplines:

Human Development, Neuroscience, Psychology 

Faculty Members:

Élodie Cauvet - eca@disstockholm.se

Program Director:

Suman Ambwan

Academic support:

academics@disstockholm.se 

Time & Place:

Tuesdays & Fridays, 11.40 - 13.00

Classroom 1E510

 

Course Description

Prerequisite: one semester of neuroscience, physiological psychology, or biological psychology at the university level.

A cognitive behavioral neuroscience perspective will be used to explore the normal development of the child, from prenatal, infancy to adolescence with regards to perception, attention, language, learning, memory, executive function, emotion and social cognition. Brain structures and functions that support these processes developmentally, such as neuroplasticity and critical/sensitive periods will be considered, as will the implications of culture and the social context.  Scandinavian perspectives will be addressed.

 

Learning Objectives

By the end of this course, students should be able to:

  1. Describe the main theoretical perspectives in developmental neuroscience.
  2. Describe common research methods, and their uses, in developmental neuroscience.
  3. Read and summarize scientific papers within the field of developmental neuroscience.
  4. Conduct observations of atypical and typical child behavior, and connect to theories of neurological development.
  5. Identify milestones of typical development, behavioral and neurological (and identify delays): both through observation of behavior and measures of neurological functioning.
  6. Describe cultural differences (especially comparing Scandinavia to North America) that might affect neurological development and behavioral repertoires
  7. Describe implications of neurodevelopmental disorders on the brain- and behavior level.

 

Faculty

Élodie Cauvet obtained her PhD in Cognitive Neuroscience, from Pierre & Marie Curie University in Paris (France). Her research interest started with language acquisition in infants leading to the study of the cerebral processing of language and music in adults. She became interested in neurodevelopmental disorders starting with developmental dyslexia then expending into autism spectrum disorders as well as ADHD. She is using techniques from psychology as well as neuroimaging in her research, this includes MRI (anatomical and functional) as well as EEG and eye tracking. She has been conducting her latest research at Karolinska Institutet Center for Neurodevelopmental Disorders (KIND). Her interests include social cognitive skills, empathy and emotion processing within the whole spectrum of functioning from typicality till disorders such as ASD. With DIS since 2016.

 

Readings 

Required Textbook

Johnson, H. & de Haan, M. (2015). Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience: An Introduction (4th Edition). New York: Wiley-Blackwell.

Articles and Other Media on Canvas

Adolph, K. E., Cole, W. G., Komati, M., Garciaguirre, J. S., Badaly, D., Lingeman, J. M., ... & Sotsky, R. B. (2012). How do you learn to walk? Thousands of steps and dozens of falls per day. Psychological science, 23(11), 1387-1394.

Adolph, K.E, Berger, S.E., Leo, A.J. (2011). Developmental continuity? Crawling, cruising and walking, Develop- mental Science, 14(2), 306-318.

Anderson, V., Spencer-Smith, M., & Wood, A. (2011). Do children really recover better? Neurobehavioural plas- ticity after early brain insult. Brain. 1-15.

Brouwer, R.M., Koenis, M.M.G., Schnack, H.G, van Baal, G.C., van Soelen, I.L.C, Hulshoff Pol, H.E., (2015) Lon- gitudinal development of hormone levels and grey matter density in 9 and 12-year-old twins, Behavior Ge- netics, 45(5), 313 – 323.

Carrion‐Castillo, A., Franke, B., & Fisher, S. E. (2013). Molecular genetics of dyslexia: an overview. Dyslexia, 19(4), 214-240.

Decety, J., & Svetlova, M. (2012). Putting together phylogenetic and ontogenetic perspectives on empathy. De- velopmental cognitive neuroscience, 2(1), 1-24.

Ekblad, M., Korkeila, J., & Lehtonen, L. (2015). Smoking during pregnancy affects foetal brain development. Acta Paediatrica, 104(1), 12-18.

Goddings, A-L. (2014). The Role of puberty in human adolescent brain development, Chapter from Brain Crosstalk in Puberty and Adolescence, Ed: Bourguignon, J-P., Carel, J-C., Christen, Y., Springer International Pub- lishing. 75 – 83.

Hepper, P. (2015). Behavior During the Prenatal Period: Adaptive for Development and Survival. Child Develop- ment Perspectives, 9(1), 38-43

Jardri, R., Houfflin-Debarge, V., Delion, P., Pruvo, J-P., Thomas, P., Pins, D. (2012). Assessing fetal response to maternal speech using a noninvasive functional brain imaging technique. International Journal of Develop- mental Neuroscience, 30, 159-161.

Juárez, S.P., Merlo, J. (2013) The Effect of Swedish Snuff (Snus) on Offspring Birthweight: A Sibling Analysis. PLoS ONE 8(6): e65611. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0065611

Kandel (2000): Principles of Neural Science, Chapter 1 and 2

Klingberg, T. (2014). Childhood cognitive development as a skill. Trends in cognitive sciences, 18(11), 573-579

Kolb, B., & Fantie, B. D. (2009). Development of the child’s brain and behavior. In Handbook of clinical child neuropsychology (pp. 19-46). Springer US.

Kolb, B., Mychasiuk, R., & Gibb, R. (2014). Brain development, experience, and behavior. Pediatric blood & can- cer, 61(10), 1720-1723.

Lacquaniti, F., Ivanenko, Y.P., Zago, M., (2012) Development of human locomotion, Current Opinion in Neurobi- ology, 22(5), 822-828.

Lee, G. Y., & Kisilevsky, B. S. (2014). Fetuses respond to father's voice but prefer mother's voice after birth.
Developmental psychobiology, 56(1), 1-11

Mampe, B., Friederici, A.D., Christophe, A., Wemke K. (2009) Newborns’ cry melody is shaped by their native language, Current Biology, 19(23), 1994-1997.

Newcombe, N. S. (2013). Cognitive development: changing views of cognitive change. Wiley Interdisciplinary Re- views: Cognitive Science, 4(5), 479-491.

Petersen, S. E., & Posner, M. I. (2012). The attention system of the human brain: 20 years after. Annual review of neuroscience, 35, 73.

Quinn, P. C., & Bhatt, R. S. (2009). Perceptual organization in infancy: bottom-up and top-down influences. Op- tometry & Vision Science, 86(6), 589-594.

Rapin, I., (2016). Dyscalculia and the calculating brain, Pediatric Neurology, 61, 11-20.

Reid, V., Dunn, K., Young, R.,Amu, J., Donovan, T. & Reissland, N., (2017). The human fetus preferentially engages with face-like visual stimuli, Current Biology, 27, 1825-1828

Skagerström, J., Alehagen, S., Häggström-Nordin, E., Årestedt, K., & Nilsen, P. (2013). Prevalence of alcohol use before and during pregnancy and predictors of drinking during pregnancy: a cross sectional study in Sweden. BMC public health, 13(1), 1.

Thompson, B. L., Levitt, P., & Stanwood, G. D. (2009). Prenatal exposure to drugs: effects on brain development and implications for policy and education. Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 10(4), 303-312.

Vandermosten, M., Hoeft, F., Norton, E.S. (2016) Integrating MRI brain imaging studies of pre-reading children with current theories of developmental dyslexia: a review and quantitative meta-analysis, Current Opinion in Behavioral Science, 10, 155-161.

Ward, J., Hoadley C., Hughes J.E.A., Smith P., Allison C. & Baron-Cohen S., Simner J., (2017) Atypical sensory sensitivity as a shared feature between synaesthesia and autism, Scientific Reports, 7:41155

Ward, J. (2013). Synesthesia. Annual review of psychology, 64, 49-75.

Wells, M. B., & Lang, S. N. (2016). Supporting same‐sex mothers in the Nordic child health field: a systematic literature review and meta‐synthesis of the most gender equal countries. Journal of clinical nursing, 25 (23-24), 3469-3483

Wells; M.B. (2016). Literature review shows that fathers are still not receiving the support they want and need from Swedish child health professionals, Acta Paediatrica, 105, 1014-1023

 

Field Studies

Please see course calendar

Guest Lecturers

TBA

 

Approach to Teaching

As an enthusiastic teacher, I try to make all classes interactive and interesting. Classes include a mix of lectures by the teacher and discussions led by the students.

It is very important that the content is clear and understood by all students. You are thus encouraged to ask questions and talk to me if you feel that there are still unclear zones after the classes.

 

Expectations of the Students

Students are expected to participate actively in class. This includes taking part in the discussions, asking or answering questions. There are no stupid questions and I encourage and reward student expression. Opinions should be expressed, scientific sources to discussion points are always rewarded. Students have to inform the teacher in advance in case they cannot attend a class. Missing a class unexcused will affect the active participation grade.

Students are expected to answer online quizzes before the class.

Students are expected to read the required readings before class.

Students are responsible for their learning. This implies taking the notes from the lecture, summarizing the content of both lectures and discussions.

Slides include graphs, pictures and illustrations necessary to understand the class. Students are expected to take notes complementing and explaining the slides. Slides are a support and should be treated as such and not as the main source of info required. Class content delivered by the teacher need to be written down individually by the students. 

Main discussion will be summarized by the students and transcribed on white board and pictures of these will be available on Canvas in respective classes.

 

Evaluation

The course consists of lectures, discussions and assignments at home and in class. Students attendance of the classes and their active participation in the discussions are taken into account in the evaluation. In discussions and assignments, students are required to demonstrate that they read the literature for the classes and that they are able to apply their knowledge. Showing independent and critical thinking is also subject to evaluation.

 

Grading

Detailed assignment descriptions and grading rubrics for each assignment are available on canvas.

Assignment

Percent

Active class participation (including quizz) - Individual

20%

Scientific paper presentation and evaluation - Group

20%

Prenatal development and Dietary advice: cross cultural comparison - 

15%

Midterm written Exam - Individual

20%

Preparation, parent magazin and presentation of the developmental timeline at showcase - Group

25%

Total

100%

Descriptions of assignments

Active class participation (20%): The student is active in discussions and group work. Active participation and engagement include asking questions related to readings and material presented in the class and taking part in discussions and being active during field trips and guest lectures. Active participation means to contribute on own initiative. See Assignments within Canvas for a class participation grading.

 

Scientific paper presentation and evaluation (20%): Group

Each group of two will choose an article from a selected list during the first class and will prepare their presentation at home.

In class: Power point presentation 8 to 10 min per group. Handing in power point for grading (on top of the physical presentation). Another group of students will be assigned to the reviewer role for each presentation and will be responsible (and graded on) asking relevant questions after their fellow presentation (5 min max questions).

Each student will also be graded on its participation to the discussion mostly on its assigned review group.

See Assignments within Canvas for a detailed rubric

 

Prenatal development and Dietary advice: cross cultural comparison (15%):

Each student chooses one dietary element (e.g. alcohol, vitamin A, caffeine, unpasteurized milk, raw meat, sushi ... ) 10 days before the due date. Chosen elements have to be reported on a specific discussion  thread on canvas to ensure that each student chose a different dietary element. Then, they write an essay describing:

- how pregnancy and future mother might be impacted by the consumption of the element,

- how prenatal development (in particular neurological) is hypothesized to be affected by the product,

- what cognitive/behavioral deficits (attention, perception, executive function, memory, etc.) this might result in after birth.

- The student should also evaluate what level of scientific evidence supports the official governmental advice.

- A discussion about the effect of culture on the consumption of this dietary element must be included comparing at least 2 different countries/cultures (UK, USA or Australia do not count as different cultural background). It should include how/if the recommendation differ depending on country, and how/if the difference in recommendation affect the child population (if this is known).  Check the chosen countries/cultures with the teacher to be sure that they are considered as culturally far enough for the purpose of this exercise.

The essay should be 4 to 5 page long (not counting title page and references) - between 7500 and 8500 characters including spaces, APA style (1.5 line spacing) and handed in through Canvas.

See Canvas for a detailed grading rubric

In class, presentation day:

 

 

Midterm written exam (20%): Individual

Written exam covering basic neurological concepts, prenatal, perinatal and postnatal development, based on all readings and content so far.

Covered topics are types of neurons, principles of electric and chemical functions of neurons, general architecture of the adult brain, and the most widely used research methods for neuroscience, (e.g. fMRI, EEG, lesions), basic genetic concept as well as

The test will take about 70 minutes, and consists of a mix of short answer and essay questions. The test will be conducted during class time, and no study materials will be allowed during the test. The purpose of midterm exam is to ensure a common ground of basic knowledge, and assimilation of the learning objectives of the classes so far (prenatal development, development of physical and cognitive skills).

More information, including a study guide (study_guide1.docx), is available on Canvas.

 

Developmental timeline:

Poster/visual and review other group (10% ), Parent magazine (10%) and presentation at showcase (5%): Group

Students will integrate the content of all classes to realize a timeline depicting the development of the brain from prenatal period to early adulthood in terms of neurological, psychological and cognitive processes. This visual representation will include the different descriptive levels studied in class from cellular level, to cognitive and psychological constructs, cerebral regions and networks.

Students will be paired at the beginning of the course and will work toward building up a comprehensive developmental timeline all course long. Each "presenting" group will be assigned one skill and have the task to map this skill development onto a class common visual timeline. This should include all the descriptive levels mentioned before, the milestones from prenatal period to adulthood and the interaction with the other developmental skills.

Each group of students will write up an essay summarizing their topic written as destination of parent as if in a parent magazine, they should also list their references (scientific articles). This parent magazine article will be handed in through canvas. (10% of the grade)

Each group will be assigned to a second topic (covered by another group). This "review" group will have the task to review the other topic, asking question and engaging in an enlightened discussion with the "presenting" group (5% of the grade). (final class).

Finally, each "presenting" group will hold a 5min presentation in front of the showcase attendance, explaining to their peers and other teachers how their assigned skill is developing from prenatal to adulthood and answer the attendance questions. (5% of the grade)

 

Academic Regulations

Please make sure to read the Academic Regulations on the DIS website. There you will find regulations on:

 

 DIS - Study Abroad in Scandinavia - www.DISabroad.org

Course Summary:

Date Details Due