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Methylphenidate increases selectivity of visual scanning in children referred for hyperactivity
Authors:Margaret M Flintoff  Roderick W Barron  James M Swanson  Alexa Ledlow  Marcel Kinsbourne
Institution:(1) Department of Psychology, University of Guelph, NIG 2W1 Guelph, Ontario, Canada;(2) Hospital for Sick Children, Canada;(3) University of Toronto, Canada
Abstract:Visual scanning patterns were investigated in 32 children referred for symptoms of hyperactivity in a doubleblind crossover comparison of methylphenidate and placebo treatments. Total errors, response latency, and visual fixations were recorded as the child scanned computer-generated visual matching-to-sample problems. Results indicated that the number of fixations on the standard stimulus in the matching task was significantly larger in the methylphenidate state. Drug treatment also resulted in a significant increase in the number of systematic comparisons between the standard and the variants in the task. However, the increased selectivity of attention to the standard stimulus was not accompanied by a reduction of total errors. It was suggested that the stimulant drug may increase attentional selectivity even when such a shift fails to produce improvement in task performance.This research is based in part upon a master's thesis completed by the first author in the department of Psychology, University of Guelph. The authors are indebted to Dean H. Owen for providing the random polygons used in the experiment. The research was supported by grants from the Ontario Mental Health Foundation and the Medical Research Council of Canada to James M. Swanson.
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