Developing and validating a combined attention systems test
Author
Lawrence, Michael
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Modern research on the phenomena of attention has motivated an increasingly nuanced view of its subsystems and their relations. However, popular tools for the measurement thereof are limited in their design in ways that hinder ongoing exploration of both typical and atypical operation of attention. This work describes a new tool that seeks to remediate these deficiencies, the Combined Attention Systems Test (CAST), and details initial efforts to validate its use, including deployment to study the operation of attention in populations of young adults and children. We observe reliable and stable measurement of a variety of phenomena of attention, some expected from prior literature and some newly discovered as a function of the CAST's improved design over existing tools. While we remark on areas of further potential improvement, this work argues strongly for the use of the CAST over previously popular tools.
Subject
Collections
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
THE ATTENTION NETWORK TEST (ANT): INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES? AND ?COMPONENTS OF ATTENTION ACROSS THE LIFE SPAN
Ishigami, Yoko (2011-04-04)Using orthogonal subtractions of performance in selected conditions the attentional network test (ANT) measures the efficacy of three isolable components of attention: alerting, orienting, and executive control. This ... -
Repeated measurement of the components of attention of older adults using the two versions of the Attention Network Test: Stability, isolability, robustness, and reliability
Ishigami, Yoko; Klein, Raymond M. (Frontiers Research Foundation, 2011-15)No abstract available.