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Journal Article

Citation

Catroppa C, Anderson V. Child Neuropsychol. 1999; 5(4): 251-264.

Affiliation

Royal Children's Hospital, Melbourne, Australia. catroppc@cryptic.rch.unimelb.edu.au

Copyright

(Copyright © 1999, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1076/0929-7049(199912)05:04;1-R;FT251

PMID

10925709

Abstract

Only a limited number of studies have investigated attention following pediatric head-injury. The present study examined sustained attention and processing speed in a group of children who had sustained a mild (n = 27), moderate (n = 33) or severe (n = 16) traumatic brain injury (TBI). No significant differences were evident between the TBI groups on reaction time measures. Results did show that the severe TBI group exhibited greater deficits in the area of sustained attention, in comparison to children with mild and moderate injuries, in the acute stage following traumatic brain injury. This difficulty may impact on the future development of skills dependent on intact attentional capacity.


Language: en

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