Logo image
Early Risk, Attention, and Brain Activation in Adolescents Born Preterm
Accepted manuscript   Open access   Peer reviewed

Early Risk, Attention, and Brain Activation in Adolescents Born Preterm

Dennis P. Carmody, Margaret Bendersky, J. Kevin DeMarco, Mark Hiatt, Stanley M. Dunn, Thomas Hegyi and Michael Lewis
Child Development, Vol.77(2), pp.384-394
2006
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.7282/T3JD4V76
PMCID: PMC1522057

Abstract

fMRI Prematurity Premature infants Environmental risk Attention Magnetic Resonance Imaging
The relations among early cumulative medical risk, cumulative environmental risk, attentional control, and brain activation were assessed in 15 – 16-year-old adolescents who were born preterm. Functional magnetic resonance imaging found frontal, temporal, and parietal cortex activation during an attention task with greater activation of the left superior-temporal and left supramarginal gyri associated with better performance. Individual differences in early cumulative risk are related to patterns of brain activation such that medical risk is related to left parietal cortex activation and environmental risk is related to temporal lobe activation. The findings suggest that early risk is related to less mature patterns of brain activation, including reduced efficiency of processing and responding to stimuli.
pdf
Carmody2006CD_PMCVersion312.95 kBDownloadView
Accepted Manuscript (AM) Open Access
url
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8624.2006.00877.xView
Version of Record (VoR) Child Development
url
Report an accessibility issueView
Please complete a content remediation request to report an accessibility issue with a library electronic resource, website, or service.

Metrics

214 File downloads
129 Record Views

Details

Logo image