Dimensions

PlumX

How to Cite
Susana Ison, M. (2011). Intervention program for the improvement of attention abilities in Argentinean school children. International Journal of Psychological Research, 4(2), 72–79. https://doi.org/10.21500/20112084.783
License terms
The work that is sent to this journal must be original, not published or sent to be published elsewhere; and if it is accepted for publication, authors will agree to transfer copyright to International Journal of Psychological Research. 

To give up copyright, the authors allow that, International Journal of Psychological Research, distribute the work more broadly, check for the reuse by others and take care of the necessary procedures for the registration and administration of copyright; at the same time, our editorial board represents the interests of the author and allows authors to re-use his work in various forms. In response to the above, authors transfer copyright to the journal, International Journal of Psychological Research. This transfer does not imply other rights which are not those of authorship (for example those that concern about patents). Likewise, preserves the authors rights to use the work integral or partially in lectures, books and courses, as well as make copies for educational purposes. Finally, the authors may use freely the tables and figures in its future work, wherever make explicit reference to the previous publication in International Journal of Psychological Research. The assignment of copyright includes both virtual rights and forms of the article to allow the editorial to disseminate the work in the manner which it deems appropriate. 

The editorial board reserves the right of amendments deemed necessary in the application of the rules of publication.

Abstract

We understand attention as an active and constructive mechanism that can be improved with regular practice. The purpose of the present research was to evaluate the efficiency of an intervention program aimed at stimulating attention abilities in Argentinean school children between 7-12 years old previously detected as having low attention efficiency, and considering age and sex. We formed two groups: a) under study, with 72 students, and b) control, with 66 students. In the post-intervention stage the results showed a statistically significant increase of attention efficiency in the children involved in the program. These are promising results regarding their application to different cognitive performance profiles and the various development contexts.

Keywords:

References

Álvarez, L., Gozález-Castro, P., Nuñez, J. C., Gozález-Pienda, J. A., Álvarez, D., y Bernardo, A. B. (2007). Programa de intervención multimodal para la mejora de los déficit de atención. Psicothema, 19(4), 591-596.
Bartgis, J., Thomas, D. G., Lefler, E. K., & Hartung, C. M. (2008). The development of attention and response inhibition in early childhood. Infant and Child Development, 17, 491-502.
Betts, J., Mckay, J., Maruff, P., & Anderson, V. (2006). The development of sustained attention in children: The effect of age and task load. Child Neuropsychology, 12, 205-221.
Blázquez-Alisente, J. L., Paúl-Lapedriza, N. y Muñoz-Céspedes, J. M. (2004). Atención y funcionamiento ejecutivo en la rehabilitación neuropsicológica de los procesos visuoespaciales. Revista de Neurología, 38(5), 487–495.
Diamond, A. (2002). Normal development of prefrontal cortex from birth to young adulthood: anatomy and biochemistry. In D. T. Stuss & R. T. Knight (Eds.), Principles of frontal lobe function. London: Oxford University Press. P. 198-210.
Farah, M. J. (2000). The cognitive Neuroscience of Vision. USA: Blackwell Publishers Inc.
García-Molina, A., Enseñat-Cantallops, A., Tirapu-Ustárroz, J., & Roig-Rovira, T. (2009). Maduración de la corteza prefrontal y desarrollo de las funciones ejecutivas durante los primeros cinco años de vida. Revista de Neurología, 48(8), 435–440.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Cited by