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The impact of motivation on sustained attention in very preterm and term-born children: An ERP study

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Version 2 2025-03-28, 10:49
Version 1 2025-01-29, 16:12
journal contribution
posted on 2025-03-28, 10:49 authored by Jennifer Retzler, Groom Madeleine, Samantha JohnsonSamantha Johnson, Lucy Cragg

Objective:

To compare the effect of motivational features on sustained attention in children born very preterm and at term.

Method:

EEG was recorded while 34 8-to-11-year-old children born very preterm and 34 term-born peers completed two variants of a cued continuous performance task (CPT-AX); a standard CPT-AX with basic shape stimuli, and structurally similar motivating variant, with a storyline, familiar characters, and feedback.

Results:

Higher hit rates, quicker response times and larger event-related potential (ERP) amplitudes were observed during the motivating, compared with the standard, task. Although groups did not differ in task performance, between-task differences in ERPs associated with orienting were larger in term-born than very preterm children.

Conclusion:

The findings add to previous evidence of disruption to the brain networks that support salience detection and selective attention in children born preterm. Manipulations that increase intrinsic motivation can promote sustained attention in both term-born and very preterm children.


History

Author affiliation

College of Life Sciences Population Health Sciences

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Journal of Attention Disorders

Publisher

SAGE Publications

issn

1087-0547

eissn

1557-1246

Copyright date

2025

Available date

2025-03-28

Language

en

Deposited by

Professor Samantha Johnson

Deposit date

2025-01-14

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