Lj. Groome et al., SIMILARITIES AND DIFFERENCES IN BEHAVIORAL STATE ORGANIZATION DURING SLEEP PERIODS IN THE PERINATAL INFANT BEFORE AND AFTER BIRTH, Child development, 68(1), 1997, pp. 1-11
The purpose of this study was to determine the degree of consistency i
n behavioral state organization for 30 low-risk human participants exa
mined as fetuses at 38-40 weeks gestation and again as neonates at app
roximately 2 weeks postnatal age. Behavioral states were assigned simi
larly for fetuses and neonates in terms of heart rate pattern and the
presence or absence of eye and gross body movements. We found that the
time spent in a sleep period was distributed among quiet sleep (QS),
active sleep (AS), and indeterminate states in virtually identical pro
portions for fetuses and neonates. However, the only within-subject co
nsistency between the fetal and neonatal periods was in the duration o
f complete QS epochs. Fetuses made fewer transitions between QS and AS
, but neonates had shorter and more structured AS --> QS transitions.
These findings suggest that, whereas central nervous system processes
governing QS do not change appreciably, the control of AS undergoes si
gnificant changes in the 4 weeks spanning the fetal and neonatal perio
ds. We believe that the duration of enclosed QS epochs provides the on
ly stable measure of behavioral state development between the prenatal
and postnatal periods.