Authors
Tom Manly, Vicki Anderson, Ian Nimmo-Smith, Anna Turner, Peter Watson, Ian H Robertson
Publication date
2001/11
Journal
The Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry and Allied Disciplines
Volume
42
Issue
8
Pages
1065-1081
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Description
“Attention” is not a unitary brain process. Evidence from adult studies indicates that distinct neuroanatomical networks perform specific attentional operations and that these are vulnerable to selective damage. Accordingly, characterising attentional disorders requires the use of a variety of tasks that differentially challenge these systems. Here we describe a novel battery, the Test of Everyday Attention for Children (TEA-Ch), comprising nine subtests adapted from the adult literature. The performance of 293 healthy children between the ages of 6 and 16 is described together with the relationships to IQ, existing measures of attention, and scholastic attainment. This large normative sample also allows us to test the fit of the adult model of functionally separable attention systems to the observed patterns of variance in children's performance. A Structural Equation Modelling approach supports this view. A three-factor …
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