Working memory in children with epilepsy: An event-related potentials study
Autor: | Heidi Wouters, Lieven Lagae, Peter Stiers, Maarten Mennes, Ivan Myatchin |
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Přispěvatelé: | Neuropsychology & Psychopharmacology, RS: FPN NPPP I |
Rok vydání: | 2009 |
Předmět: |
Male
medicine.medical_specialty Visual perception Adolescent Benign Rolandic Epilepsy Neuropsychological Tests Electroencephalography Audiology Developmental psychology Idiopathic generalized epilepsy Epilepsy Event-related potential Reaction Time medicine Humans Attention Child Cerebral Cortex Analysis of Variance medicine.diagnostic_test Working memory Patient Selection Signal Processing Computer-Assisted Cognition medicine.disease Memory Short-Term Neurology Visual Perception Evoked Potentials Visual Female Neurology (clinical) Psychology Photic Stimulation Psychomotor Performance |
Zdroj: | Epilepsy Research, 86(2-3), 183-190. Elsevier Science |
ISSN: | 0920-1211 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.eplepsyres.2009.06.004 |
Popis: | Summary Purpose The aim of this study was to find out whether children with idiopathic epilepsy did show different cortical activation patterns compared to non-epileptic children during performance of a working memory task. To this end event-related potentials (ERPs) were measured during a visual 1-backmatching task. A quantitative analysis technique to analyze the ERP data, without any ‘a priori’ decisions on ‘peak’ presence, amplitudes or latencies, is used. Methods 46 children were tested (6–16 years old): 21 children with well-controlled “benign” epilepsy (benign rolandic epilepsy, n = 9, idiopathic generalized epilepsy, n = 12) and a control group of 25 non-epileptic children. Behavioral task performance and ERPs following both target and nontarget stimuli were compared across both study groups. Results No differences were found in the number of omission errors or commission errors or in the reaction times between groups. However, ERPs following target stimuli showed significantly higher amplitude in the epilepsy group compared to the control group over frontal and central regions within the time window between 250 and 425 ms poststimulus, what coincides with the time window of target–nontarget stimulus discrimination. Discussion Our study shows that children with benign, well-controlled epilepsy show a different cortical activation pattern during a visual working memory task. We hypothesize that they need more brain processing effort to achieve the same performance level as their age matched controls. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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