Publication | Open Access
Motion perception in preterm children: role of prematurity and brain damage
67
Citations
23
References
2009
Year
NeuropsychologyDevelopmental Cognitive NeuroscienceInfant PerceptionMotor ControlSocial SciencesEarly VisionBrain DamageCognitive DevelopmentBrain InjuryNeurologyCognitive NeuroscienceEarly Life ExposureBiological Motion PerceptionCognitive ScienceBrain StructureEarly Childhood DevelopmentVision ResearchVisual PathwayPerception-action LoopChild DevelopmentVisual FunctionMotion PerceptionNeuroanatomyNeuroscienceMedicinePreterm ChildrenPure Global Motion
We tested 26 school-aged children born preterm at a gestational age below 34 weeks, 13 with and 13 without periventricular brain damage, with four different visual stimuli assessing perception of pure global motion (optic flow), with some form information (segregated translational motion) and form-defined static stimuli. Results were compared with a group of age-matched healthy term-born controls. Preterm children with brain damage showed significantly lower sensitivities relative to full-term controls in all four tests, whereas those without brain damage were significantly worse than controls only for the pure motion stimuli. Furthermore, when form information was embedded in the stimulus, preterm children with brain lesions scored significantly worse than those without lesions. These results suggest that in preterm children dorsal stream-related functions are impaired irrespective of the presence of brain damage, whereas deficits of the ventral stream are more related to the presence of periventricular brain damage.
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