Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Elizabeth N. McLaughlin is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Elizabeth N. McLaughlin.


Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology | 2001

The attentional blink is immune to masking-induced data limits

Elizabeth N. McLaughlin; David I. Shore; Raymond M. Klein

The attentional blink is the robust finding that processing a masked item (T1) hinders the subsequent identification of a backwards masked second item (T2), which follows soon after the first one. There has been some debate about the theoretically important relation between the difficulty of T1 processing and the ensuing blink. In Experiment 1 we manipulated the difficulty of T1 in such a way as to affect the quality of data without altering the amount of resources allocated to its identification. We found no relation between the accuracy of T1 identification and the blink. In Experiment 2, the same difficulty manipulation was applied to T2, and we observed an additive pattern with the blink. Together, this pattern of results indicates that a data-limited difficulty manipulation does not affect the blink, whether applied to T1 or T2. In Experiment 3 we used an individual differences methodology to show that performance in the traditional “stream”-like presentation (rapid serial visual presentation) was highly correlated with performance in our modified “target mask, target mask” paradigm, thus allowing for comparisons beyond the present methodology to much of the previous literature that has used the stream paradigm.


Child Neuropsychology | 2009

Interference control in children with and without ADHD: a systematic review of Flanker and Simon task performance.

Jennifer C. Mullane; Penny Corkum; Raymond M. Klein; Elizabeth N. McLaughlin

The present review systematically summarizes the existing research that has examined two reaction-time-based interference control paradigms, known as the Eriksen Flanker task and the Simon task, in children with and without ADHD. Twelve studies are included, yielding a combined sample size of 272 children with ADHD (M age 9.28 yrs) and 280 typically developing children (M age 9.38 yrs). As predicted, specific disadvantages were found in the ADHD group in terms of reaction time, percentage of errors, and efficiency of performance on incongruent relative to congruent trials, providing evidence for weaker interference control in this group.


Journal of Pediatric Psychology | 2013

Manipulating Sleep Duration Alters Emotional Functioning and Cognitive Performance in Children

Jennifer Vriend; Fiona Davidson; Penny Corkum; Benjamin Rusak; Christine T. Chambers; Elizabeth N. McLaughlin

OBJECTIVE To examine the impact of sleep duration on emotional functioning and cognitive performance in children. METHODS 32 children (8-12 years) wore actigraphs for 3 weeks. Following a week of typical sleep, each child was randomly assigned to go to bed 1 hr earlier for 4 nights (Long Sleep) or 1 hr later for 4 nights (Short Sleep) relative to their typical bedtime. Each child then completed the opposite condition. After each week, emotional and cognitive functioning were assessed using objective and subjective measures. RESULTS Results revealed impaired functioning in the Short- relative to the Long-Sleep condition on measures of positive affective response, emotion regulation, short-term memory, working memory, and aspects of attention. CONCLUSIONS Results suggest that even modest differences in sleep duration over just a few nights can have significant consequences for childrens daytime functioning. These findings demonstrate the important impact of sleep duration on childrens daytime functioning.


Journal of Anxiety Disorders | 2004

Gender differences in Childhood Anxiety Sensitivity Index (CASI) dimensions.

Trudi M. Walsh; Sherry H. Stewart; Elizabeth N. McLaughlin

We examined the hierarchical structure of the Childhood Anxiety Sensitivity Index (CASI) as a function of gender and examined the occurrence of gender differences in anxiety sensitivity (AS) dimensions in a large nonclinical sample of children and adolescents (N = 1698). Separate principal components analyses (PCAs) on the 18 CASI items for the total sample, boys, and girls revealed similar lower-order three-factor structures for all groups. The three factors reflected Physical, Social/Control, and Psychological Concerns. PCAs on the lower-order factor scores revealed similar unidimensional higher-order solutions for all groups. Girls scored higher than boys on the Physical and, to a lesser extent, Social/Control Concerns factors; girls scored higher on the Physical Concerns factor relative to their scores on the Social/Control and Psychological Concerns factors; and boys scored higher on the Social/Control and Psychological Concerns factors relative to their scores on the Physical Concerns factor. Girls also scored higher than boys on the higher-order factor representing the Global AS construct. The present study provides additional support for the theoretical hierarchical structure of AS and suggests that there is a difference in the manifestation of AS between girls and boys.


Journal of Attention Disorders | 2011

Alerting, orienting, and executive attention in children with ADHD

Jennifer C. Mullane; Penny Corkum; Raymond M. Klein; Elizabeth N. McLaughlin; Michael Lawrence

Objective: This study evaluated the alerting, orienting, and executive attention abilities of children with ADHD and their typically developing (TD) peers using a modified version of the adult attention network test (ANT-I). Method: A total of 25 children with ADHD, Combined Type (ADHD-C, mean age = 9.20 years), 20 children with ADHD, Predominantly Inattentive Type (ADHD-I, mean age = 9.58 years), and 45 TD children (mean age = 9.41 years) matched on age and intelligence to the ADHD group completed the ANT-I. Results: As hypothesized, children with ADHD (n = 45) displayed significantly weaker alerting and executive attention than TD children (n = 45) but did not differ from TD children in orienting ability. Children with ADHD-C (n = 25) did not differ from children with ADHD-I (n = 20) on any of the three networks. Conclusions: Results supported the growing body of evidence that has found alerting and executive attention deficits in children with ADHD. (J. of Att. Dis. 2011; 15(4) 310-320)


Cognitive Behaviour Therapy | 2010

Confirmatory Factor Analysis of the Childhood Anxiety Sensitivity Index: A Gender Comparison

Kristi D. Wright; Gordon J.G. Asmundson; Donald R. McCreary; Sherry H. Stewart; Elizabeth N. McLaughlin; M. Nancy Comeau; Trudi M. Walsh

The Childhood Anxiety Sensitivity Index (CASI) is an 18-item self-report tool designed to measure the construct of anxiety sensitivity (i.e. the belief that anxiety may have harmful consequences such as sickness, embarrassment, or loss of control) in children and adolescents. Previous factor analytic examinations of the CASI have produced varied results. Gender may play a role in this observed variability. In an effort to confirm the factor structure of the measure across gender, CASI items for 671 children and adolescents were subjected to confirmatory factor analysis. Results indicated that for boys two-, three-, and four-factor structures provided a relatively good fit to the data, with the three-factor structure emerging as having the best fit overall. In contrast, for girls only the three-factor structure fitted the data well. Direct comparison of fit of the three-factor model across gender provided evidence to support the notion that childhood anxiety sensitivity is similar in structure across gender.


Children's Health Care | 2012

Sleep Quantity and Quality in Relation to Daytime Functioning in Children

Jennifer Vriend; Fiona Davidson; Penny Corkum; Benjamin Rusak; Elizabeth N. McLaughlin; Christine T. Chambers

This study examined sleep in relation to daytime functioning in 32 typically developing children (8–12 y). Participants wore actigraphs for one week and then completed tasks designed to measure emotional functioning, short-term memory, working memory, and attention. Results revealed that children slept approximately 1 h less per night than recommended. Older children had shorter sleep durations, higher sleep efficiencies, and later sleep onset times. Examination of the relationships between sleep and daytime functioning revealed that small variations in sleep were significantly associated with differences in emotional functioning and attention. Results highlight the need to increase awareness about the importance of sleep in children.


Child Neuropsychology | 2016

The development of and interaction among alerting, orienting, and executive attention in children

Jennifer C. Mullane; Michael Lawrence; Penny Corkum; Raymond M. Klein; Elizabeth N. McLaughlin

A sex-balanced sample (N = 96) of children from age 6.5 to age 12.5 completed a modified Attention Network Test. Across these ages, we found evidence for developmental changes to alerting and executive control but stable orienting. Additionally, we found that the youngest members of our sample manifested an interaction between alerting and executive control that is opposite to that typically found in adults; a reversal that diminishes with age to achieve the adult pattern by the older end of the age range of our sample.


Journal of Pediatric Psychology | 2010

Experimentally-Induced Learned Helplessness in Adolescents with Type 1 Diabetes

Elizabeth N. McLaughlin; Marie-josée Lefaivre; Elizabeth A. Cummings

OBJECTIVES To determine whether adolescents with type 1 diabetes are more at risk for learned helplessness than their healthy peers. METHODS Twenty-three adolescents with diabetes and 25 controls completed a solvable or unsolvable concept formation task. All completed pre- and post-task performance and attribution ratings, and later completed an anagram-solving task to determine if perceived helplessness on the first task would negatively impact performance on the second. RESULTS Participants in the unsolvable condition solved fewer anagrams; those with diabetes did not show weaker performance than controls. Participants in the solvable condition (diabetes and controls) showed an increase in internal attributions from before the concept formation task to after. In the unsolvable condition, only participants with diabetes made more external attributions for their failure. CONCLUSIONS Contrary to the only other controlled study to use this paradigm in youth with chronic illness, adolescents with diabetes were not more susceptible to learned helplessness.


Cognitive Behaviour Therapy | 2007

Childhood Anxiety Sensitivity Index Factors Predict Unique Variance in DSM‐IV Anxiety Disorder Symptoms

Elizabeth N. McLaughlin; Sherry H. Stewart; Steven Taylor

Collaboration


Dive into the Elizabeth N. McLaughlin's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge