• Title of article

    Distributed attentional deficits in chronic methamphetamine abusers: Evidence from the Attentional Network Task (ANT)

  • Author/Authors

    Salo، نويسنده , , Ruth and Gabay، نويسنده , , Shai and Fassbender، نويسنده , , Catherine and Henik، نويسنده , , Avishai، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
  • Pages
    7
  • From page
    446
  • To page
    452
  • Abstract
    Objective al of the present study was to examine distributed attentional functions in long-term but currently abstinent methamphetamine (MA) abusers using a task that measures attentional alertness, orienting, and conflict resolution. s currently abstinent MA abusers (1 month–5 years) and 22 healthy non-substance using adults were administered a multimodal version of the Attentional Network Task (ANT-I). In this task subjects identified the direction of a centrally presented arrow using a key press. Analyses examined the interaction between alerting tones, location cueing and congruency between the target arrows and flanking distractor stimuli. s rticipants were faster when an auditory tone preceded the trial onset (p < 0.001), on trials in which a valid cue preceded the location of the target arrow (p < 0.001), and on congruent trials (i.e., when all display arrows faced in the same direction) (p < 0.001). Of primary interest was the finding that MA abusers were more influenced by the conflict between the peripheral arrows and the central target arrow (p = 0.009). There were also correlations between length of drug sobriety and executive function as well as between drug-induced psychiatric symptoms and alertness. sions results suggest that chronic MA abusers display cognitive deficits that may reflect a specific vulnerability to distraction on a task of executive function. These findings are consistent with other studies that have reported deficits in anterior attentional systems and top-down cognitive control.
  • Keywords
    attention , Attentional network , ant , Methamphetamine , CONFLICT
  • Journal title
    Brain and Cognition
  • Serial Year
    2011
  • Journal title
    Brain and Cognition
  • Record number

    2250536