Frontal lesions and sustained attention

AJ Wilkins, T Shallice, R McCarthy - Neuropsychologia, 1987 - Elsevier
AJ Wilkins, T Shallice, R McCarthy
Neuropsychologia, 1987Elsevier
Neurological patients were presented with a succession of 2–11 stimuli which they were
required to count, reporting the number in the series when it finished. The stimuli were
binaural clicks, or pulses on the right or on the left index finger. Regardless of stimulus
modality or lateralization, patients with lesions involving the right frontal lobe were impaired
when the presentation rate was 1/sec. There was no corresponding impairment when the
presentation rate was increased to 7/sec. It is argued that at slow rates when the task was …
Abstract
Neurological patients were presented with a succession of 2–11 stimuli which they were required to count, reporting the number in the series when it finished. The stimuli were binaural clicks, or pulses on the right or on the left index finger. Regardless of stimulus modality or lateralization, patients with lesions involving the right frontal lobe were impaired when the presentation rate was 1/ sec. There was no corresponding impairment when the presentation rate was increased to 7/ sec. It is argued that at slow rates when the task was monotonous patients with right- frontal lesions were less able than others to sustain attention voluntarily.
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