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Attentional deficit in learning-disabled children: evidence from visual half-field asymmetries
Authors:J E Obrzut  G W Hynd  R D Zellner
Affiliation:University of Northern Colorado USA;University of Georgia and Medical College of Georgia USA;University of Northern Colorado USA
Abstract:The structural theory of cerebral lateralization has been typically used to explain hemispheric asymmetries. However, the attentional model of brain functioning may help resolve some of the inconsistent findings with groups of learning-disabled children. To test this hypothesis, a visual half-field paradigm for word recognition was employed in a group of 26 learning-disabled and 26 normal children matched for sex, chronological age, and handedness. Three experimental conditions (unilateral, cued unilateral, and bilateral) and two word error types (visually and acoustically confusable words) were analyzed. The results indicated that normals produced the expected RVHF superiority under all experimental conditions, but the learning-disabled produced the expected RVHF superiority only under the cued unilateral condition. Learning-disabled children also made significantly more visually and acoustically confusable errors than normals and unlike normal children increased the number of acoustic errors in the RVF under bilateral stimulation. These results provide evidence that learning-disabled children may process information inefficiently and have brain activation patterns that are more susceptible to attentional effects.
Keywords:Requests for reprints should be addressed to John E. Obrzut   Department of Psychology   University of Northern Colorado   Greeley   CO 80639.
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