Everett J, Thomas J, Cote F, Levesque J, Michaud D
Ecole de Psychologie, Université Laval Ste Foy, Québec, Canada.
Child Psychiatry Hum Dev. 1991 Winter;22(2):79-87. doi: 10.1007/BF00707786.
Hyperactive and normal children were given a test of selective attention (Stroop test) and a neurocognitive test sensitive to a functional deficit of prefrontal cortex (Wisconsin Card Sorting Test). Hyperactive children showed significant deficits on both measures. After a year of psychostimulant medication, the hyperactive children all showed clinical and neurocognitive improvement, but continued to show a selective attention deficit compared with normal children. The results indicate a dissociation between the cognitive processes measured by the Wisconsin test and selective attention as measured by the Stroop, and that the selective attention deficit is more resistant to psychostimulant intervention.