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Assessment of attention in biological mothers using the attention network test - revised

Current Psychology, 2020
Previous research has evaluated the cognitive effects of pregnancy, yet only a handful of studies have specifically evaluated maternal attention. This will be the first study to investigate the effects of biological motherhood (M = 3.5 years postpartum) on attention network functioning.
Valerie Miller   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Evaluation of the attention network test using vibrotactile stimulations

Behavior Research Methods, 2014
We report a vibrotactile version of the attention network test (ANT)-the tactile ANT (T-ANT). It has been questioned whether attentional components are modality specific or not. The T-ANT explores alertness, orienting, cognitive control, and their relationships, similar to its visual counterpart, in the tactile modality.
Yael, Salzer   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Neural correlates of the attention network test in schizophrenia

European Archives of Psychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience, 2011
Attentional deficits are prominent in schizophrenia, affecting nearly all cognitive functions. Human attention comprises three essential components: alerting, orienting and executive control. For the assessment of these functions, the attention network test (ANT) has been proposed and used in healthy controls and patients. In schizophrenia, the ANT has
Volker, Backes   +6 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Can Emotion Modulate Attention? Evidence for Reciprocal Links in the Attentional Network Test

Experimental Psychology, 2011
Evolution theory suggests that adaptive behavior depends on our ability to give preferential attention to emotional information when it is necessary for our survival, and to down-regulate irrelevant emotional influence. However, empirical work has shown that the interaction between emotion and attention varies, based on the attentional network in ...
Noga, Cohen, Avishai, Henik, Nilly, Mor
openaire   +2 more sources

Working memory capacity and attention network test performance

Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2006
AbstractComplex span tasks are predictive of many aspects of behavior, in both experimental and applied areas of cognitive psychology. Our view is that these tasks measure primarily working memory capacity (WMC), which we argue is the ability to control attention. The development of the Attention Network Test (ANT) provided the opportunity to study the
Thomas S. Redick, Randall W. Engle
openaire   +1 more source

Test–retest reliability of the attention network test from the perspective of intrinsic network organization

European Journal of Neuroscience
Abstract The attention network test (ANT), developed based on the triple‐network taxonomy by Posner and colleagues, has been widely used to examine the efficacy of alerting, orienting and executive control in clinical and developmental neuroscience studies.
Ziwei Kong   +6 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Effects of fatigue on attention and vigilance as measured with a modified attention network test

Experimental Brain Research, 2020
As part of a larger study on the effects of fatigue on various attentional and behavioural measures, we had participants complete a modified version of Luna et al.'s (J Neurosci Methods 306:77-87, Luna et al., J Neurosci Methods 306:77-87, 2018) ANTI-Vea task (mANTI-Vea) at the beginning and end (pre/post) of each of two 8-h testing sessions.
Brett B. T. Feltmate   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

The OpenSesame version of the Attention Network Test

2018
An English and a Greek version of the Attentional Networks Task of Fan et al. (2002)
Avraamides, Marios, Shimi, Andria
openaire   +1 more source

Multisensory cueing and the attention network test in aging

Seeing and Perceiving, 2012
The Attention Network Test (ANT) assesses the effect of alerting and orienting cues on a visual flanker task measuring executive attention. Previous findings revealed that older adults demonstrate greater RT benefits when provided with visual orienting cues that offer both spatial and temporal information of an ensuing target.
Jeannette R. Mahoney   +4 more
openaire   +1 more source

The impact of total sleep deprivation on attentional networks and its neural mechanisms: Based on the Attention Network Test

Behavioural Brain Research
Sleep deprivation, both daily and occupational, has become a prevalent issue in modern society, significantly affecting individuals' attention functions. Traditionally, attention was viewed as a singular, unified system, but advances in neuroscience have revealed it as a network involving coordinated interactions across multiple brain regions.
Ying, Yang   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

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