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Change Blindness in Children With ADHD A Selective Impairment in Visual Search?

Authors

Maccari, Lisa , Casagrande, Maria , MARTELLA, DIANA, Anolfo, Mariagrazia , Rosa, Caterina , Fuentes, Luis J. , Pasini, Augusto

External publication

No

Means

J. Atten. Disord.

Scope

Article

Nature

Científica

JCR Quartile

SJR Quartile

JCR Impact

2.397

SJR Impact

0.855

Publication date

01/10/2013

ISI

000324331200009

Abstract

Objective: This study evaluated change blindness and visual search efficiency in children with ADHD in searching for central and marginal changes. Method: A total of 36 drug-naive children (18 ADHD/18 controls) performed a flicker task that included changes in objects of central or marginal interest. The task required observers to search for a change until they detected it. Results: Children with ADHD performed more slowly and less accurately than did typically developing children, specifically in detecting marginal-interest changes. Conclusion: In contrast to more standard visual search tasks, flicker tasks seem to be more sensitive to highlight focused attention deficits in children diagnosed with ADHD. Concretely, ADHD attentional deficits were more apparent when the task involved serial top-down strategies.

Keywords

change blindness; focused attention; ADHD; change detection; visual search; flicker task

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