Caitlin C Clements
ccclements.bsky.social
Caitlin C Clements
@ccclements.bsky.social
Asst Prof @NotreDame Psych | BRAIN Lab | Study autism, reward processing, & rare genetic syndromes
Hiring! Please RT and send to anyone who is looking for a research coordinator position in a psych lab! apply.interfolio.com/164693
March 13, 2025 at 6:50 PM
Children with TSC not on meds (red solid line) looked shockingly similar to typically developing children (gray line). So I think the most interesting finding is that GABAergic medications were associated with a large change in beta power (lower peak freq, higher peak amp). 5/x
February 3, 2025 at 6:28 PM
the finding of greater beta power in toddlers with TSC was driven by those children with high seizure severity (Fig B: red=high, yellow=low, gray=matched typical children) or those taking GABAergic antiepileptic medication (Fig D), or both. 4/x
February 3, 2025 at 6:28 PM
Toddlers with TSC showed greater periodic beta power compared to age- and sex-matched typically developing children. That means more neural oscillations at frequencies between 12-30 Hz: compare the red and gray lines above the gray bar on the x-axis. But… 3/x
February 3, 2025 at 6:27 PM
New paper alert! A story where secondary findings were perhaps more interesting than our original question. rdcu.be/d6LnQ Before I start, I extend deep thanks to the families in the study. 🧵 1/x
February 3, 2025 at 6:26 PM