Paying closer attention to attention
It鈥檚 a familiar story, and most of us reading about Ellen would assume that she did indeed suffer from ADHD.聽
But now researchers from 缅北强奸 have suggested that there may be an overreporting of attention problems in children with FASD, simply because parents and teachers are using a misplaced basis for comparison. They are testing and comparing children with FASD with children of the same physical or chronological age, rather than with children of the same mental age, which is often quite a lot younger.
鈥淏ecause the link between fetal alcohol syndrome and ADHD is so commonly described in the literature, both parents and teachers are more likely to expect these children to have attention problems,鈥 says Prof. Jacob Burack, a professor in 缅北强奸鈥檚 Dept. of Educational and Counselling Psychology and the senior author on a recent study on the subject. 鈥淏ut what teachers often don鈥檛 recognize is that although the child they are dealing with is eleven years old in chronological terms, they are actually functioning at the developmental age of an eight-year old. That鈥檚 a pretty big difference. And when you use mental age as the basis of comparison, many of the attention problems that have been described in children with FASD no longer seem of primary importance.鈥
The researchers recruited children with FASD whose average chronological age was just under twelve years old. But their average mental age, determined by standard tests, was actually closer to nine-and-a-half years old. (The children were recruited through the Asante Centre for Fetal Alcohol Syndrome in British Columbia, and though the number of children studied may appear small, this is a fairly typical size for studies on FASD, given the difficulties of the diagnostic process.)
These children were then compared with children who were developing typically and whose average chronological age was about eight-and-a-half years old and whose average mental age was similar to that of the group of children diagnosed with FASD.
After using tests to measure specific aspects of attention, the researchers then compared the performance of children with FASD on these tests with the results of children of the same mental age. What they found was that while children like Ellen had difficulties with certain kinds of attention skills, notably in terms of shifting attention from one object to another, there were other areas, such as focus, where they had no significant difficulties at all. So, if we were to compare these aspects of attention to a hockey game, typically these children would have no difficulty focusing on the puck in the arena, but would have problems following the puck being passed from one player to another.
This suggests to Dr. Kimberly Lane, the PhD student who conducted the research, that there is a need to develop a more nuanced understanding of attention skills. 鈥淲e use words like attention loosely, but it鈥檚 really an umbrella term that covers various aspects of attending to different people or events or environments,鈥 says Dr. Lane. 鈥淏y using more complex assessment techniques of various aspects of attention it will be possible to get a better picture of the attention difficulties faced by children with FASD,鈥 she adds.
鈥淏ut no matter what the tests say, it鈥檚 important for teachers and parents to understand that.the difficulties these children have with attention may be less important than their more general problems, and we need to work with them as they are.鈥
To read the paper in Frontiers in Human Neuroscience: