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Eira Jansson-Verkasalo

Researcher at University of Turku

Publications -  25
Citations -  518

Eira Jansson-Verkasalo is an academic researcher from University of Turku. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mismatch negativity & Stuttering. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 25 publications receiving 431 citations. Previous affiliations of Eira Jansson-Verkasalo include Oulu University Hospital.

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Resting state fMRI reveals a default mode dissociation between retrosplenial and medial prefrontal subnetworks in ASD despite motion scrubbing

TL;DR: The results were very similar with and without motion scrubbing thus indicating the efficacy of the conventional motion correction methods combined with ICA dual-regression, and specific dissociation between DMN subnetworks was revealed on high ICA dimensionality, where networks centered at the medial prefrontal cortex and retrosplenial cortex showed weakened coupling.
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Functional mapping of dynamic happy and fearful facial expression processing in adolescents.

TL;DR: The results indicated that opposing-valence dynamic facial expressions had differential effects on many cortical structures but not on subcortical limbic structures and fear induces stronger responses in attention and mirror neurons probably related to fear contagion.
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Identification of biological and environmental risk factors for language delay: The Let's Talk STEPS study.

TL;DR: At the population-level, gender was the most powerful biological factor in predicting language delays and both parents' social status had predictive value for the child's language development.
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Atypical central auditory speech-sound discrimination in children who stutter as indexed by the mismatch negativity.

TL;DR: Investigation of speech sound encoding and central auditory discrimination in children who stutter showed that central auditory speech-sound processing was typical at the level of sound encoding in CWS, and central speech- sound discrimination was atypical in the group of CWS.
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Effects of recurrent acute otitis media on cortical speech-sound processing in 2-year old children.

TL;DR: The results suggest that childhood RAOM does not affect the central auditory pathway integrity or sound encoding, however, RAOM may lead to aberrant preattentive discrimination of sound features even when the peripheral auditory input is normal.