Attentional skills following traumatic brain injury in childhood: a componential analysis
- 1 January 1998
- journal article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Brain Injury
- Vol. 12 (11) , 937-949
- https://doi.org/10.1080/026990598121990
Abstract
Recent research has documented residual deficits in attention following traumatic brain injury in childhood. The present study aimed to investigate whether such deficits are global, or affect specific components of attention differentially. Four attentional domains were examined using a newly developed test of attention, the Test of Everyday Attention for Children: sustained attention, focussed attention, divided attention, and response inhibition. Eighteen children with a history of traumatic brain injury, aged between 8 and 14 years, and 18 non-injured matched controls participated in the study. Results indicated that attentional skills may be differentially impaired after TBI, with children who have sustained moderate-to-severe TBI exhibiting significant deficits for sustained and divided attention, and response inhibition, but relatively intact focussed attention.Keywords
This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- Age at injury as a predictor of outcome following pediatric head injury: A longitudinal perspectiveChild Neuropsychology, 1995
- Developmental analysis of three aspects of information processing: Sustained attention, selective attention, and response organizationDevelopmental Neuropsychology, 1994
- Frontal lobesCurrent Opinion in Neurobiology, 1993
- Attentional deficits following closed-head injuryJournal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology, 1992
- Is there a central executive deficit after severe head injury?Clinical Rehabilitation, 1992
- Analysis of the elements of attention: A neuropsychological approachNeuropsychology Review, 1991
- Attention in children: A neuropsychologically based model for assessmentDevelopmental Neuropsychology, 1990
- Traumatic brain injury: A comparison of three clinical tests, and analysis of recoveryThe Clinical Neuropsychologist, 1989
- Syndrome of nonverbal learning disabilities: The final common pathway of white-matter disease/dysfunction?The Clinical Neuropsychologist, 1987
- Attention deficit disorder: Current perspectivesPediatric Neurology, 1987