PLoS ONE (Jan 2020)

Executive and non-executive functions in low birthweight/preterm adolescents with differing temporal patterns of inattention.

  • Marisa N Spann,
  • Anna Silberman,
  • Judith Feldman,
  • Steven J Korzeniewski,
  • J Blake Turner,
  • Agnes H Whitaker

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0231648
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 4
p. e0231648

Abstract

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ObjectiveThis study assesses whether low birthweight/preterm (LBW/PT) adolescents with persistent inattention (PIA) have neuropsychological deficits that distinguish them from adolescents with school age limited inattention (SAL) and those largely unaffected (UA).MethodThree latent classes (PIA, SAL, UA), derived from an earlier analysis of a LBW/PT birth cohort were compared on non-executive and executive functioning measures assessed at age 16.ResultsThe PIA class displayed the poorest performance on executive functioning, which was exaggerated in the context of lower IQ. The PIA and the SAL classes had poorer performance on non-executive functioning relative to the UA class. Both types of functioning mediated the relationship of class to school service use and grade retention.ConclusionNeuropsychological impairment characterizes children and adolescents with inattention problems. Problems in executive functioning characterize the subset whose inattention persists through adolescence. Subsequent research can examine the potential for remediating these deficits to address academic and social problems.