2009
DOI: 10.1177/1087054709347446
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Attention Training for School-Aged Children With ADHD: Results of an Open Trial

Abstract: The findings suggest that a randomized clinical trial of Pay Attention! is warranted to investigate its viability as a treatment for attention and executive functioning deficits in ADHD.

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Cited by 60 publications
(60 citation statements)
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References 27 publications
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“…(C) Neurobiological model of cognitive and motivational processes showing linear development of top down prefrontal control network relative to a ∩-shaped function for the development of valuation network (based on Somerville and Casey [84]). (D) Plot showing two discount curves based on four indifference points of a relatively impulsive person with ADHD and a more patient control participant; the arrow indicates the proposed effect of training on the discount curve Recent work using the same treatment design replicated these results in addition to recording improvements in inattentive symptoms and executive functioning [51], hyperactive impulsive symptoms, working memory, and fluid reasoning [52] as well as reading comprehension [53]. As noted by Posner and Rothbart [54], the promising results stemming from attentional training research provide encouragement to continue studying the effects of this intervention, both behaviorally and neurologically.…”
Section: Attention Trainingmentioning
confidence: 88%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…(C) Neurobiological model of cognitive and motivational processes showing linear development of top down prefrontal control network relative to a ∩-shaped function for the development of valuation network (based on Somerville and Casey [84]). (D) Plot showing two discount curves based on four indifference points of a relatively impulsive person with ADHD and a more patient control participant; the arrow indicates the proposed effect of training on the discount curve Recent work using the same treatment design replicated these results in addition to recording improvements in inattentive symptoms and executive functioning [51], hyperactive impulsive symptoms, working memory, and fluid reasoning [52] as well as reading comprehension [53]. As noted by Posner and Rothbart [54], the promising results stemming from attentional training research provide encouragement to continue studying the effects of this intervention, both behaviorally and neurologically.…”
Section: Attention Trainingmentioning
confidence: 88%
“…Treatment may accelerate the development of these sensory processing regions, as well as the connections between them and the prefrontal cortex. This may explain why most studies using cognitive training, which typically have samples ranging in age from 7 to 14 years, demonstrate reliable results in attention and executive functions in contrast to inconsistent improvements in measures of impulsivity [47,48,51,52]. The effectiveness of cognitive training exercises that target functions, such as working memory and attention which are regulated by the top-down structures such as the prefrontal cortex, may be even more successful in later years, such as adolescence and young adulthood when the prefrontal cortex is undergoing significant changes.…”
Section: Developmental Considerations For Cognitive Trainingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Two large metaanalyses of observational studies which compare cognitive functions in patients with ADHD with healthy participants, founded Spatial working memory, impulse inhibition, and vigilance to be the most impaired functions (5,6). According to another study (1998), the deficits of ADHD may be characterized as inefficiencies in underlying attention networks that sub serve EF and may be amenable by training (7).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…foi desenvolvido a partir dos princípios do APT para uso em crianças de 4 a 10 anos de idade, com o objetivo de intervir nas difi culdades de atenção sustentada, seletiva, alternada e dividida. Para Tamm et al (2010) o treinamento da atenção se concentra no treinamento de habilidades atencionais centrais usadas em muitas tarefas (melhorando a efi ciência da rede que permite a realização de uma tarefa específi ca). Por isso, um desempenho melhorado em várias tarefas é esperado, ou seja, a transferência do treinamento.…”
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“…mostraram que houve signifi cativas melhoras em uma série de medidas não-treinadas de atenção e efi ciência acadêmica (Kerns, Eso, & Thompson, 1999); alterações signifi cativas em medidas de atenção visual e auditiva, pré e pós-treino (Semrud-Clikeman, Harrington, Clinton, Connor, & Sylvester, 1998;Semrud-Clikeman et al, 1999); melhora dos sintomas de TDAH e das FEs relatadas por pais e terapeutas, bem como melhora de desempenho nos testes de raciocínio, fl exibilidade cognitiva e memória operacional (Tamm et al, 2010); efeitos signifi cativos da intervenção sobre os sintomas de TDAH (segundo os pais e profi ssionais clínicos), sobre a capacidade de se concentrar (auto-relato da criança), sobre o funcionamento executivo (relato dos pais), além de melhora em testes neuropsicológicos relacionados à capacidade de planejamento estratégico (Tamm et al, 2012).…”
unclassified