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Dive into the research topics where Lisa Maccari is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Lisa Maccari.


Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders | 2013

Inhibition of Return in Response to Eye Gaze and Peripheral Cues in Young People with Asperger's Syndrome.

Andrea Marotta; Augusto Pasini; Sabrina Ruggiero; Lisa Maccari; Caterina Rosa; Juan Lupiáñez; Maria Casagrande

Inhibition of return (IOR) reflects slower reaction times to stimuli presented in previously attended locations. In this study, we examined this inhibitory after-effect using two different cue types, eye-gaze and standard peripheral cues, in individuals with Asperger’s syndrome and typically developing individuals. Typically developing participants showed evidence of IOR for both eye-gaze and peripheral cues. In contrast, the Asperger group showed evidence of IOR to previously peripherally cued locations but failed to show IOR for eye-gaze cues. This absence of IOR for eye-gaze cues observed in the participants with Asperger may reflect an attentional impairment in responding to socially relevant information.


Acta Psychologica | 2013

Attention network test — The impact of social information on executive control, alerting and orienting

Francesca Federico; Andrea Marotta; Tiziana Adriani; Lisa Maccari; Maria Casagrande

According to the attention network approach, attention is best understood in terms of three functionally and neuroanatomically distinct networks - alerting, orienting, and executive attention. An important question is whether social information influences the efficiency of these networks. Using the same structure as the Attentional Network Test (ANT), we developed a variant of this test to examine attentional effects in response to stimuli with and without social-cognitive content. Fish, drawings or photographs of faces looking to the left or right were used as target stimuli. Results collected from twenty-four university students showed that photographs of faces positively affected attentional orienting and executive control, whereas reduced the efficiency of alerting, as compared to both face drawings and fish. These results support the status of human faces as a special class of visual stimuli for the human attentional systems.


Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology | 2012

Assessing attentional systems in children with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder.

Maria Casagrande; Diana Martella; Maria Cleonice Ruggiero; Lisa Maccari; Claudio Paloscia; Caterina Rosa; Augusto Pasini

The aim of this study was to evaluate the efficiency and interactions of attentional systems in children with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) by considering the effects of reinforcement and auditory warning on each component of attention. Thirty-six drug-naïve children (18 children with ADHD/18 typically developing children) performed two revised versions of the Attentional Network Test, which assess the efficiency of alerting, orienting, and executive systems. In feedback trials, children received feedback about their accuracy, whereas in the no-feedback trials, feedback was not given. In both conditions, children with ADHD performed more slowly than did typically developing children. They also showed impairments in the ability to disengage attention and in executive functioning, which improved when alertness was increased by administering the auditory warning. The performance of the attentional networks appeared to be modulated by the absence or the presence of reinforcement. We suggest that the observed executive system deficit in children with ADHD could depend on their low level of arousal rather than being an independent disorder.


European Child & Adolescent Psychiatry | 2014

Impaired reflexive orienting to social cues in attention deficit hyperactivity disorder

Andrea Marotta; Maria Casagrande; Caterina Rosa; Lisa Maccari; Bianca Berloco; Augusto Pasini

The present study investigated whether another person’s social attention, specifically the direction of their eye gaze, and non-social directional cues triggered reflexive orienting in individuals with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) and age-matched controls. A choice reaction time and a detection tasks were used in which eye gaze, arrow and peripheral cues correctly (congruent) or incorrectly (incongruent) signalled target location. Independently of the type of the task, differences between groups were specific to the cue condition. Typically developing individuals shifted attention to the location cued by both social and non-social cues, whereas ADHD group showed evidence of reflexive orienting only to locations previously cued by non-social stimuli (arrow and peripheral cues) but failed to show such orienting effect in response to social eye gaze cues. The absence of reflexive orienting effect for eye gaze cues observed in the participants with ADHD may reflect an attentional impairment in responding to socially relevant information.


Acta Psychologica | 2014

Efficiency and interactions of alerting, orienting and executive networks: The impact of imperative stimulus type

Alfredo Spagna; Diana Martella; Mara Sebastiani; Lisa Maccari; Andrea Marotta; Maria Casagrande

The Attention Network Test (ANT) generates measures of three attention networks: alerting, orienting and executive control. Arrows have been generally used as imperative stimuli in the different versions of this paradigm. However, it is unknown whether the directional nature of these stimuli can modulate the efficiency of the executive control and its interaction with alerting and orienting. We developed three ANT variants to examine attentional effects in response to directional and non-directional stimuli. Arrows (ANTI-A), colored fruits (ANTI-F) and black geometrical-shape (ANTI-G) were used as imperative stimuli (i.e., flanker stimuli). Data collected from fifty-two university students, in two experiments, showed that arrows stimuli produced a greater interference effect and a greater orienting effect as compared to the other stimuli. Moreover, only arrows modulated the interaction between executive control and orienting: a reduced flanker effect in spatially cued trials was only observed in ANTI-A. These results suggest that the directional value of the stimuli increases the conflict and modulates the efficiency of executive control and its interaction with orienting network.


Journal of Attention Disorders | 2013

Change Blindness in Children With ADHD: A Selective Impairment in Visual Search?

Lisa Maccari; Maria Casagrande; Diana Martella; Mariagrazia Anolfo; Caterina Rosa; Luis J. Fuentes; Augusto Pasini

Objective: This study evaluated change blindness and visual search efficiency in children with ADHD in searching for central and marginal changes. Method: A total of 36 drug-naïve children (18 ADHD/18 controls) performed a flicker task that included changes in objects of central or marginal interest. The task required observers to search for a change until they detected it. Results: Children with ADHD performed more slowly and less accurately than did typically developing children, specifically in detecting marginal-interest changes. Conclusion: In contrast to more standard visual search tasks, flicker tasks seem to be more sensitive to highlight focused attention deficits in children diagnosed with ADHD. Concretely, ADHD attentional deficits were more apparent when the task involved serial top-down strategies.


Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders | 2014

Visual Search and Emotion: How Children with Autism Spectrum Disorders Scan Emotional Scenes

Lisa Maccari; Augusto Pasini; Emanuela Caroli; Caterina Rosa; Andrea Marotta; Diana Martella; Luis J. Fuentes; Maria Casagrande

This study assessed visual search abilities, tested through the flicker task, in children diagnosed with autism spectrum disorders (ASDs). Twenty-two children diagnosed with ASD and 22 matched typically developing (TD) children were told to detect changes in objects of central interest or objects of marginal interest (MI) embedded in either emotion-laden (positive or negative) or neutral real-world pictures. The results showed that emotion-laden pictures equally interfered with performance of both ASD and TD children, slowing down reaction times compared with neutral pictures. Children with ASD were faster than TD children, particularly in detecting changes in MI objects, the most difficult condition. However, their performance was less accurate than performance of TD children just when the pictures were negative. These findings suggest that children with ASD have better visual search abilities than TD children only when the search is particularly difficult and requires strong serial search strategies. The emotional–social impairment that is usually considered as a typical feature of ASD seems to be limited to processing of negative emotional information.


Experimental Brain Research | 2014

Effects of sleep loss on emotion recognition: a dissociation between face and word stimuli

Lisa Maccari; Diana Martella; Andrea Marotta; Mara Sebastiani; Nerisa Banaj; Luis J. Fuentes; Maria Casagrande


Cognitive Processing | 2014

Poor vigilance affects attentional orienting triggered by central uninformative gaze and arrow cues

Andrea Marotta; Diana Martella; Lisa Maccari; Mara Sebastiani; Maria Casagrande


Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society | 2009

Gaze and arrow induce different effects on attentional orienting as a function of target context

Maria Casagrande; Lisa Maccari; Andrea Marotta; Diana Martella; Antonino Raffone; Mara Sebastiani

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Maria Casagrande

Sapienza University of Rome

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Mara Sebastiani

Sapienza University of Rome

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Augusto Pasini

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Caterina Rosa

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Antonino Raffone

Sapienza University of Rome

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Bianca Berloco

Sapienza University of Rome

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