Distractibility in Learning-Disabled Children
- 1 April 1984
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Journal of Learning Disabilities
- Vol. 17 (4) , 234-236
- https://doi.org/10.1177/002221948401700410
Abstract
Learning-disabled (LD) children are thought to be deficient in attention and memory performance, especially selective attention in the presence of distracting information. However, these findings have not always been confirmed and when these differential distraction effects are found they may be an artifact of the tasks' differential abilities to detect differences between groups. Two-digit span tasks were used to compare distraction performance of LD and normal learning (NL) children. On the first set of tasks, where the nondistraction and distraction conditions were matched, a priori for their ability to discriminate differences between groups, no differential distraction effect was found. In the second pair of tasks, the distraction condition was designed to make it more discriminating than the nondistraction condition and a differential distraction effect was found. These results are discussed in terms of the need for researchers to consider the psychometric properties of their tasks as important variables and as another potential explanation for some of the disparate findings in the distractibility literature with LD children.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Residual Attentional Deficits in AdolescentsJournal of Learning Disabilities, 1981
- Selective Attention Deficits in Poor Readers? Dichotic Listening, Speeded Classification, and Auditory and Visual Central and Incidental Learning TasksChild Development, 1979
- Testing the Attentional Deficit NotionJournal of Learning Disabilities, 1979
- Schizophrenic performance when distractors are present: Attentional deficit or differential task difficulty?Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 1975
- Linguistic and Nonlinguistic Competing Message EffectsJournal of Learning Disabilities, 1973
- Problems in the measurement of cognitive deficits.Psychological Bulletin, 1973
- Children with learning disabilities: Conditioning, differentiation, and the effect of distraction.Australian and New Zealand Journal of Surgery, 1970
- The Effect of Distraction on Selective AttentionChild Development, 1967
- Effect of irrelevant peripheral visual stimuli on discrimination learning in minimally brain-damaged children.Journal of Consulting Psychology, 1967
- The Relation of the Reliability of Multiple-Choice Tests to the Distribution of Item DifficultiesPsychometrika, 1952