Covert orientation of visual attention after closed head injury
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Cited by (36)
Deficits in visuospatial attentional cueing following mild traumatic brain injury
2022, NeuropsychologiaCitation Excerpt :For example, in the Attention Network Test (ANT), participants are required to identify the direction of an arrow among either congruent or incongruent distractor arrows. In contrast, in the Covert Orienting of Attention Task (COAT), participants are required to respond to the presentation of target light in the periphery (Bate et al., 2001; S. L. Cremona-Meteyard et al., 1992; Halterman et al., 2006; van Donkelaar et al., 2005). Such tasks are not immediately comparable due to their different methodologies, and the type of task may influence the degree to which a deficit in attention allocation is observed in clinical populations, such as TBI.
Role of sensory modality and motor planning in the slowing of patients with traumatic brain injury: A meta-analysis
2013, Neuroscience and Biobehavioral ReviewsHemispheric visual atentional imbalance in patients with traumatic brain injury
2007, Brain and CognitionCitation Excerpt :The authors concluded that in terms of the Posner model this would suggest that, despite being slower, TBI patients oriented their attention in much the same way as controls. However, this finding is not consistent with results of Cremona-Meteyard and colleagues (Cremona-Meteyard et al., 1992; Cremona-Meteyard & Geffen, 1994) who found deficits in the “pre-aligning” (engaging) of attention in severe closed head injury (CHI) patients by measuring the RT benefit of valid directional cueing and cost of miscueing. At the same time, in contrast to the work of Bate and collaborators (2001), they did not found any difference in overall RT between the CHI and control groups.
Attentional orienting triggered by gaze in schizophrenia
2006, NeuropsychologiaDeficits in multiple object-tracking and visual attention following mild traumatic brain injury
2022, Scientific Reports