Attention, Genes, and Developmental Disorders

Kim Cornish (Professor, Professor, McGill University, Montreal, Canada, and Monash University, Melbourne),John Wilding (Emeritus Reader in Psychology, Emeritus Reader in Psychology, Royal Holloway College, University of London)

Attention, Genes, and Developmental Disorders
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Oxford University Press Inc
Country
United States
Published
12 August 2010
Pages
592
ISBN
9780195179941

Attention, Genes, and Developmental Disorders

Kim Cornish (Professor, Professor, McGill University, Montreal, Canada, and Monash University, Melbourne),John Wilding (Emeritus Reader in Psychology, Emeritus Reader in Psychology, Royal Holloway College, University of London)

What is attention? How does it go wrong? Do attention deficits arise from genes or from the environment? Can we cure it with drugs or training? Are there disorders of attention other than deficit disorders? The past decade has seen a burgeoning of research on the subject of attention. This research has been facilitated by advances on several fronts: New methods are now available for viewing brain activity in real time, there is expanding information on the complexities of the biochemistry of neural activity, individual genes can be isolated and their functions identified, analysis of the component processes included under the broad umbrella of attention has become increasingly sophisticated, and ingenious methods have been devised for measuring typical and atypical development of these processes, from infancy into childhood, and then into adulthood. In this book, Kim Cornish and John Wilding are concerned with attention and its development, both typical and atypical, particularly in disorders with a known genetic etiology or assumed genetic linkage. Tremendous advances across seemingly diverse disciplines - molecular genetics, pediatric neurology, child psychiatry, developmental cognitive neuroscience, and education - have culminated in a wealth of new methods for elucidating disorders at multiple levels, possibly paving the way for new treatment options. Cornish and Wilding use three specific-yet-interlinking levels of analysis: genetic blueprint (genotype), the developing brain, and the behavioral-cognitive outcomes (phenotype), as the basis for charting the attention profiles of six well-documented neurodevelopmental disorders: ADHD, autism, fragile X syndrome, Down syndrome, Williams syndrome, and 22q11 deletion syndrome. Their overarching aim in this book is to provide the most authoritative and extensive account to date of disorder-specific attention profiles and their development from infancy through adolescence.

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