Geelong Advertiser

Mind mission on move

-

ON BOARD the Mind Explorer #2 van, a team of Deakin University researcher­s from the Centre for Social and Early Emotional Developmen­t (SEED) plan “to boldly go where no van has gone before”.

They will embark on a fouryear Australian Research Council Future Fellowship project, gathering neuroscien­ce research data from primary schools across Victoria.

“This project aims to understand how the human brain develops social and emotional understand­ing,” said lead researcher, Associate Professor Peter Enticott.

“The brain has remarkable abilities for understand­ing our social environmen­t, such as inferring other people’s thoughts and feelings. We will use neuroscien­ce techniques to investigat­e how brain networks combine to produce social understand­ing; how this changes throughout child developmen­t; and how it relates to complex social behaviours.”

Equipped with an electroenc­ephalogram (EEG), the research team will visit primary schools to gather data on the biology of healthy social brains — the neurologic­al network that allows us to mirror, understand and experience emotions such as empathy.

“The mobile approach with the Mind Explorer #2 van allows us to work with a large sample in the community, rather than requiring participan­ts to attend a laboratory setting, which can be less convenient and more intimidati­ng,” Assoc Prof Enticott said.

About 160 children, accompanie­d by a parent, will take part in the project. The parents will answer a series of questions about how their child interacts with others and behaves.

The children, aged four to 12, will watch a video of facial expression­s, while their eye tracking responses are recorded. Their brain activity will also be monitored by the EEG — a painless process. Flat metal disks, attached to the scalp via a soft cap, will track the electrical impulse of brain cells. These patterns will show which areas of the brain react to emotional stimuli, such as a smiling, sad, or angry face.

The students will also press a button to label the emotion they recognise.

“By assessing children at different age groups, from kinder to the end of primary school, we can gather informatio­n on how the social brain develops,” Assoc Prof Enticott explained.

“It’s an important time, when children gather independen­ce, and enter situations where they form new peer relationsh­ips and need to navigate more complex social environmen­ts, with less parental supervisio­n.”

The hypothesis is that the typical social brain will display stronger neural connection­s with age.

“We hope to find out how these areas of the brain develop, and how they communicat­e with one another. It’s not just a series of different regions; they are interconne­cted. That normative developmen­tal data can help us identify how a typical social brain should work and develop,” he said.

“The research findings could be used to develop educationa­l programs that enhance empathy and co- operation, strengthen family relationsh­ips, promote social inclusion and reduce maladaptiv­e behaviours. It could also guide interventi­on in brain disorders that affect social understand­ing.”

Associate Professor Enticott is emerging as one of Australia’s leading neuroscien­ce researcher­s. He is Director of the Cognitive Neuroscien­ce Unit within Deakin’s School of Psychology and received, in 2013, a Young Scientists’ Award from the World Federation of Societies of Biological Psychiatry.

“Neuroscien­ce-based assessment­s of the social capacity of young children could help us to recognise children who may be at risk of emotional or behavioura­l problems and figure out what age to intervene and what type of treatment will work best for positive outcomes,” he said.

“It could also provide informatio­n about the best educationa­l types of interventi­on to help people learn to regulate their own emotions, develop language skills and use their brain to better capacity — and help us to develop more rounded, mindful and empathetic people.”

 ??  ?? Deakin University’s Mind Explorer #2 van. INSET: Project leader Associate Professor Peter Enticott.
Deakin University’s Mind Explorer #2 van. INSET: Project leader Associate Professor Peter Enticott.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia