Author:
HEFFELFINFGER AMY,CRAFT SUZANNE,SHYKEN JAYE
Abstract
Previous studies have reported that developmental
disruption of dopaminergic systems results in lateralized
deficits in visual attention (Posner et al., 1991; Craft
et al., 1992). Infants who were prenatally exposed to cocaine
were hypothesized to have increased reaction times to targets
in the right visual field on measures of visual attention
compared with infants who were not exposed to cocaine.
Seventeen children without prenatal exposure to cocaine
and 14 children who were exposed to cocaine (age range
from 8–40 months) completed a visual attention task,
the Mental Development Index of the Bayley Scales of Infant
Development, Second Edition; and the Preschool Language
Scale, Third Edition. Cocaine-exposed children were slower
to orient to stimuli in the right visual field after repeated
trials, especially after attention was first cued to the
left visual field. They were also less likely to orient
to the right when given a choice. Results suggest that
the left hemisphere visual attention system is disproportionately
affected by prenatal exposure to cocaine. (JINS,
1997, 3, 237–245.)
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Neurology (clinical),Clinical Psychology,General Neuroscience
Cited by
32 articles.
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