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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Comparing the efficacy of phonological awareness intervention with neuropsychological intervention in children with specific reading disorder

Sadasivan, Akila January 2009 (has links)
Phonological awareness is known to be associated with reading disorder. Intervention for specific reading disorder that focuses on training to improve phonological processing abilities has been found an effective means of addressing reading difficulties experienced by children. However, little is known as to what happens to other neurocognitive abilities associated with the process of reading but that are not causally linked to it. Some of these cognitions include attention, executive functions and verbal and visual memory. A series of three studies explored the relation between neuropsychological skills and phonological abilities in children with specific reading disorder. The first step in the studies involved establishing deficits in associated cognitive abilities in children with specific reading disorder. Children attending the Literacy Clinic, Department of Communication Disorders, University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand, are screened for the presence of specific reading disorder. They are routinely assessed on reading and phonological processing measures before an intervention programme is initiated. Four such children who were assessed and identified as having specific reading disorder without speech language difficulties were chosen for the study. These children, who ranged in age from 7 to 15 years, referred to as the RD group, were assessed during the week before the onset of the intervention for the neuropsychological functions of attention, executive functions, verbal and visual learning, and memory. After the assessment (termed pre-intervention assessment), they were provided with phonological processing intervention. The intervention programme was carried out by trained speech-language therapists and lasted for 10 weeks. Two sessions a week were conducted, giving a total of 20 sessions. The week after completion of the intervention, the children were assessed once again on the same neuropsychological, reading and phonological awareness tests used before the intervention (termed post-intervention assessment). The results of the pre-intervention assessment were compared with the assessment of a group of typically developing group of children without reading disorder (N = 4; age range 8 to 10 years; referred to as the NRD group). Results indicated that, at pre-intervention assessment, the specific reading disorder (RD) group had deficits in verbal fluency and inhibitory control whereas the typically developing (NRD) group did not. The RD group also differed significantly from the NRD group in reading accuracy and comprehension. After the intervention, the RD group was assessed on reading, phonological processing, and neuropsychological tests. The group showed an improvement in reading accuracy and phonological processing. Of all the neuropsychological functions, only set shifting and visuo-spatial working memory scores showed a significant change in response to intervention. Deficits in executive functions and reading comprehension difficulties persisted. It was hypothesised that the RD group improved in reading accuracy in response to the phonological awareness intervention. However, the persistent reading comprehension difficulties were hypothesised as attributable to the presence of the executive function deficits noticed in the RD group. The exploratory study helped identify the presence of neuropsychological deficits in children with specific reading disorder in addition to their reading and phonological deficits. The study also established that phonological awareness intervention brought about a change in some neuropsychological function while other deficits persisted. The phonological awareness intervention used in the first study was developed for children in New Zealand. The second study hypothesised that, if effective, this intervention would help address reading deficits found in other populations. Children from a culture outside New Zealand accordingly the same intervention as the New Zealand children received in the first study. Children in Bangalore, India, 10 to 12 year of age and under-performing in their class, were screened for the presence of specific reading disorder. From this screening, 20 children with specific reading disorder (the RD group), with average to above average intelligence and without co-morbid psychiatric conditions were chosen to participate. Twenty children were randomly allotted to one of two treatment conditions. The first group of 10 children (the PA group) received phonological awareness intervention. The second group of 10 children (the NP group) received neuropsychological intervention. All 20 children were assessed on reading, phonological awareness tests and neuropsychological tests before and after intervention. Phonological measures included, Queensland University Inventory of Literacy (QUIL, ) Sthal and Murray, Phonological awareness probes of tracking speech sounds and non-word reading tests. Neuropsychological measures included Controlled Word Association test (COWA), Digit Span, Spatial Span, Stroop Colour-Word Test Coulor trails (A & B), Ray Auditory verbal learning test, Rey Osterriech Complex figure test and block design. The scores from the pre-intervention assessment were compared to the assessment data for 20 typically developing, non-reading-disabled children (referred to as the control group). The control group was assessed once on neuropsychological tests and reading and phonological awareness measures (QUIL only). The results indicated that the 20 children with reading disorder (the RD group) differed significantly from the control group on reading abilities. In addition, the two groups differed significantly on neuropsychological measures of attention (Colour Trail, Form A), set-shifting (Colour Trail, Form B), word reading and interference control (Stroop Colour-Word Test) and phonological awareness measures of non-word reading, syllable identification, visual rhyme, spoonerism, phoneme detection and phoneme deletion. After intervention, the RD group was again assessed on reading, phonological awareness and neuropsychological measures. Both the intervention groups (PA and NP) showed improvements on reading. Both groups also made significant gains on neuropsychological measures and phonological awareness measures. The PA group showed significant changes in verbal fluency, visual scanning and attention (Colour Trails, Form A), word reading (Stroop Colour-Word Test, verbal memory (Auditory Verbal Learning Test), immediate visual memory (Complex Figure Test) and visuo-construction abilities (Block Design Test). Phonological measures that showed significant increase in response to intervention in this group included non-word reading, phoneme detection, phoneme segmentation, phoneme deletion and tracking of syllable sound changes via use of coloured blocks and letter tiles. The NP group showed significant change in neuropsychological functions such as verbal fluency, word reading and interference control (Stroop Colour-Word Test), verbal learning (Auditory Verbal Learning Test), immediate visual memory (Complex Figure Test) and visuo-construction ability (Block Design Test). The NP group also improved significantly on phonological awareness measures such as syllable identification, spoken and visual rhyme, spoonerism, phoneme detection, phoneme deletion and tracking of syllable sound changes via use of coloured blocks. This second study established that the two interventions helped improve reading abilities equally. However, the interventions differentially affected neuropsychological and phonological awareness functioning in the participants. The third study explored the changes seen in the second study’s two treatment groups (Group PA and Group NP) three months after the conclusion of the intervention programme. During the three-month period between the post-intervention assessment and the follow-up assessment, all 20 children attended regular school. They received no special help or input for their reading and spelling difficulties during this period. The follow-up assessment consisted of the same tests of reading and neuropsychological measures used at the pre- and post-intervention assessments. The results showed that the groups had maintained the gains evident at the time of the post-intervention assessment on reading measures. The PA group’s performance on the neuropsychological measures and phonological measures showed significant changes in digit span and interference control. In addition, a significant increase from the pre-intervention measures, not observed at the post-treatment assessment, was observed for set-shifting, verbal learning and memory and now-word reading. Visuo-spatial working memory showed a trend towards significance for the NP group on the follow-up assessment. Most other neuropsychological functions did not differ significantly from those evident at the time of the post-intervention assessment. The NP group, like the PA group, showed a significant increase between pre-assessment and follow-up assessment on non-word reading, visual scanning, verbal learning and visual perception. The increase noticed in these measures at the time of the post-treatment assessment, however, was not significant. Comparisons between the PA and NP group at follow-up revealed that the PA group’s performance was significantly better than the NP group’s on digit backward and interference control, while the NP group performance was significantly better than the PA group’s on verbal fluency. The two groups were comparable on all other neuropsychological, phonological awareness and reading measures. The improvements noticed in both groups immediately after the intervention and then three months after intervention were hypothesised to have occurred because the interventions addressed reading along with other cognitive abilities (e.g., executive functions, attention, verbal learning and memory, visual learning and memory) addressed in the study. The improvements noticed in both groups after three months after intervention was hypothesised to be the outcome of improvements in the neuropsychological functions. The series of three studies conducted as part of this research work has helped identify neuropsychological deficits in children with reading disorder that persisted after phonological awareness intervention. The provision of two different interventions to children with reading difficulties showed that these had positive outcomes not only for reading and phonological awareness but also for neuropsychological functioning. The most important conclusion drawn from the findings of the three studies that form this doctoral research is that intervention for reading disorder is most likely to be effective when it addresses the reading and other associated cognitive skills that underlie the reading process. The two interventions used in the study had a similar effect on reading. Both helped the participating children improve their reading scores and both helped maintain those improvements over time. It is hypothesised that the improvement observed was probably sustained over time because both interventions could have addressed the associated deficits (in addition to reading difficulties) known to occur in children with reading disorder. The efficacy of the phonological awareness intervention documented in the studies is strengthened by the finding that it was effective in treating reading disorders in children from different cultural and educational settings (New Zealand and India).
2

Neuropsychological Functioning In Social Phobia

Sutterby, Scott 01 January 2009 (has links)
The purpose of the current study was to clarify the neurocognitive mechanisms underlying social phobia. Previous research has identified some specific group differences in neurocognitive functioning between individuals diagnosed with social phobia and nonpsychiatric controls, but has failed to administer a comprehensive neuropsychological battery to a social phobia patient group, resulting in a piecemeal understanding of the neurocognitive functioning of this population and an incomplete picture of the neuropsychological profile inherent to this group. The present research utilized a broader collection of neuropsychological tests to assess nine cognitive domains: Verbal Learning, Verbal Delayed Memory, Visual Immediate Memory, Visual Delayed Memory, Visual-Spatial Processing, Verbal Working Memory, Visual Working Memory, Executive Functioning, and Attention. A mixed analysis of variance (ANOVA) did not reveal a significant group by cognitive domain interaction, nor a significant main effect of group. As this was the first study to examine multiple cognitive domains in a single sample of individuals with generalized social phobia, exploratory univariate analyses were performed to examine group differences for the specific cognitive domains. This revealed significant group differences specific to the Visual Working Memory domain, with the social phobia group scoring significantly lower than the nonpsychiatric control group. Implications of these findings and directions for future research are discussed.
3

Quality of Life and Neurocognitive Functioning in Children with Sickle Cell Disease: Investigating the Feasibility of a Computerized Cognitive Training Program

Allen, Taryn Margaret January 2014 (has links)
<p>Children with sickle cell disease (SCD) have a high risk of neurocognitive impairment. No known research, however, has examined the impact of neurocognitive functioning on quality of life in this pediatric population. In addition, limited research has examined neurocognitive interventions for these children. In light of these gaps, two studies were undertaken to (a) examine the relationship between cognitive functioning and quality of life in a sample of children with SCD and (b) investigate the feasibility and preliminary efficacy of a computerized working memory training program in this population. Forty-five youth (ages 8-16) with SCD and a caregiver were recruited for the first study. Participants completed measures of cognitive ability, quality of life, and psychosocial functioning. Results indicated that cognitive ability significantly predicted child- and parent-reported quality of life among youth with SCD. In turn, a randomized-controlled trial of a computerized working memory program was undertaken. Eighteen youth with SCD and a caregiver enrolled in this study, and were randomized to a waitlist control or the working memory training condition. Data pertaining to cognitive functioning, psychosocial functioning, and disease characteristics were obtained from participants. The results of this study indicated a high degree of acceptance for this intervention but poor feasibility in practice. Factors related to feasibility were identified. Implications and future directions are discussed.</p> / Dissertation
4

Health-related quality of life in survivors of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemia

Harila, M. (Marika) 07 June 2011 (has links)
Abstract Leukemia treatment has been implicated to be responsible for a diversity of long-term adverse effects (Pui 2008), which can occur even years after diagnosis and can seriously impair survivors’ performance status and quality of life (Campbell et al. 2007, Zeltzer et al. 2008). The aim of the present work was to assess health-related quality of life in long-term survivors of acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), and to find out whether vocational rehabilitation can promote the coping at work of young people who take part in a training intervention or help them find employment. Neuropsychological testing was performed on 64 survivors. Cranial irradiation had been administered to 44 of the survivors, while 20 survivors had been treated solely with chemotherapy. A control group consisted of 45 healthy young adults. We found that young adult survivors of childhood ALL treated with cranial irradiation had clear progressive deficits in their neurocognitive functioning at a mean of 20 years after diagnosis compared with healthy controls. Non-irradiated ALL survivors performed significantly better, but even they had statistically significant impairments in some of the neuropsychological test scores compared with the controls. Rand-36-Item health Survey (RAND-36) was used to assess subjective HRQoL, depressive symptoms were assessed with Beck Depression Inventory (BDI-21), and mental distress with General Health Questionnaire (GHQ-12) in 74 survivors of ALL. The control group consisted of 146 healthy young adults selected from local population registry. ALL survivors showed good HRQoL scores in comparison to the control group. Patients who had been treated for an ALL relapse and had received the most intensive chemo- and radiotherapy had significantly higher scores on mental health and vitality than the controls. Survivors of ALL report fewer depressive symptoms and equal mental well-being compared to healthy controls. Nine out of 63 survivors were selected for rehabilitation based on their occupation and psychosocial difficulties. The occupational rehabilitation course improved physical fitness and decreased overweight in long-term survivors of ALL, but impaired their HRQoL. Our findings support the idea that ALL survivors’ subjective experience of well-being is possibly affected by a repressive adaptive style. / Tiivistelmä Leukemiahoidoilla on todettu olevan pitkäaikaisvaikutuksia (Pui 2008), jotka voivat ilmetä jopa vuosia diagnoosin jälkeen heikentäen sairaudesta selvinneiden toimintakykyä ja elämänlaatua (Campbell et al. 2007, Zeltzer et al. 2008). Tämän tutkimuksen tavoitteena oli arvioida akuutista lymfaattisesta (ALL) leukemiasta selvinneiden terveyteen liittyvää elämänlaatua pitkällä aikavälillä sekä selvittää, voidaanko ammatillisen kuntoutuksen avulla edistää interventioon osallistuneiden työssä selviytymistä tai työllistymistä. Neuropsykologiseen tutkimukseen osallistui 64 ALL pitkäaikaisselviytyjää. Heistä 44 oli saanut pään alueen sädehoitoa ja 20 pelkästään solunsalpaajahoitoa. Verrokkiryhmässä oli 45 tervettä nuorta aikuista. Havaitsimme, että lapsuudessa pään alueen sädehoitoa saaneilla ALL-selviytyjillä oli verrokkeihin verrattuna selkeitä progressiivisia muutoksia neurokognitiivisessa toimintakyvyssä keskimäärin 20 vuotta diagnoosista. Ne, jotka eivät olleet saaneet sädehoitoa suoriutuivat huomattavasti paremmin, mutta heilläkin havaittiin tilastollisesti merkittäviä puutoksia joillakin neuropsykologisten testien osa-alueilla verrokkeihin verrattuna. 74 entisen ALL-potilaan terveyteen liittyvää elämänlaatua (HRQoL) mitattiin Rand-36 -mittarilla, masennusoireita Beckin masennustestillä (BDI-21) ja henkistä hyvinvointia General Health Questionnaire -mittarilla (GHQ-12). Verrokkiryhmäksi valittiin väestörekisteristä 146 tervettä nuorta aikuista. ALL-ryhmässä tutkittavien terveyteen liittyvää elämänlaatua mittaavat pisteet olivat hyvät verrokkiryhmään verrattuna. Ne potilaat, joita oli hoidettu leukemian uusiutumisen takia ja jotka olivat saaneet intensiivisintä solunsalpaaja- ja sädehoitoa saivat huomattavasti paremmat pisteet psyykkisen hyvinvoinnin ja vitaalisuuden osa-alueilla kuin verrokit. ALL -selviytyjät raportoivat vähemmän masennusoireita, ja he arvioivat psyykkinen hyvinvointinsa yhtä hyväksi kuin verrokit. Yhdeksän ALL pitkäaikaisselviytyjää osallistui heille suunnattuun ammatilliseen kuntoutusinterventioon. Ammatillinen kuntoutuskurssi paransi ALL -selviytyjien fyysistä suorituskykyä ja vähensi ylipainoa, mutta heikensi terveyteen liittyvää elämänlaatua. Tutkimustulokset tukevat ajatusta, että repressiivinen adaptaatio voi vaikuttaa lapsuusiän leukemiasta selvinneiden subjektiiviseen hyvinvoinnin kokemukseen.
5

Maternal alcohol consumption and socio-demographic determinants of neurocognitive function of school children in the rural Western Cape

Viglietti, Paola 02 March 2021 (has links)
Background. Within the South African context there is a large body of research regarding the associations between maternal gestational drinking and diagnosable child FASDs. However, there remains a paucity of local research regarding the impacts of other kinds of maternal drinking behaviours (e.g. past and present maternal drinking) and related socio-demographic factors on developmentally sensitive areas of child neurocognitive functioning, such as executive functioning (EF). Methods. This study was cross-sectional in design, utilising a gender balanced sample of N=464 children between the ages of 9.00 and 15.12 (year.months) in three rural areas within the Western Cape. Information regarding maternal drinking behaviours (before, during and after pregnancy) and related socio-demographic factors was collected via structured interviews with mothers or proxy respondents. Six subtests from the Cambridge Automated Neuropsychological Battery (CANTAB), were used to assess three aspects of child EF namely: (1) processing speed, assessed by the MOT and RTI subtests, (2) attention, assessed by the MTT and RVP subtests and (3) memory, assessed by the SWM and PAL subtests. Findings. For all three maternal alcohol use behaviours examined, there was an apparent non-significant trend whereby children of mothers who reported alcohol use (before, during and after pregnancy) performed worse (on average) than children of mothers reporting non-alcohol use on the EF subtests. Several of the socio-demographic factors were found to act as significant predictors of subtest specific EF performance including child sex (RTI: B=.46, p<. 01; MTT: B=.05, p<.05), child age (RTI: B=.27, p<.05; MTT: B=.11, p<.01), home language (MOT: B=- .13, p<.05), maternal employment (MTT: B=-.04, p<.05) and household size (SWM: B=-1.29, p<.05). Conclusions. These study findings provide initial insights into the impacts of different types of maternal drinking behaviours and related socio-demographic factors on child EF outcomes within the context of an LMIC, South Africa.

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