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Dive into the research topics where Nerea Crespo-Eguílaz is active.

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Featured researches published by Nerea Crespo-Eguílaz.


Child Neuropsychology | 2014

AULA virtual reality test as an attention measure: Convergent validity with Conners’ Continuous Performance Test

Unai Diaz-Orueta; Cristina García-López; Nerea Crespo-Eguílaz; Rocío Sánchez-Carpintero; Gema Climent; Juan Narbona

The majority of neuropsychological tests used to evaluate attention processes in children lack ecological validity. The AULA Nesplora (AULA) is a continuous performance test, developed in a virtual setting, very similar to a school classroom. The aim of the present study is to analyze the convergent validity between the AULA and the Continuous Performance Test (CPT) of Conners. The AULA and CPT were administered correlatively to 57 children, aged 6–16 years (26.3% female) with average cognitive ability (IQ mean = 100.56, SD = 10.38) who had a diagnosis of attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) according to DSM-IV-TR criteria. Spearman correlations analyses were conducted among the different variables. Significant correlations were observed between both tests in all the analyzed variables (omissions, commissions, reaction time, and variability of reaction time), including for those measures of the AULA based on different sensorial modalities, presentation of distractors, and task paradigms. Hence, convergent validity between both tests was confirmed. Moreover, the AULA showed differences by gender and correlation to Perceptual Reasoning and Working Memory indexes of the WISC-IV, supporting the relevance of IQ measures in the understanding of cognitive performance in ADHD. In addition, the AULA (but not Conners’ CPT) was able to differentiate between ADHD children with and without pharmacological treatment for a wide range of measures related to inattention, impulsivity, processing speed, motor activity, and quality of attention focus. Additional measures and advantages of the AULA versus Conners’ CPT are discussed.


Infancia Y Aprendizaje | 2006

Medida de atención sostenida y del control de la impulsividad en niños : nueva modalidad de aplicación del test de percepción de diferencias caras

Nerea Crespo-Eguílaz; Juan Narbona; Felisa Peralta; Rosario Repáraz

Resumen El Test de Percepción de Diferencias (TPD) es una prueba de tachado con lápiz y papel. Hemos prolongado el período de aplicación de esta prueba a 6 minutos para medir la atención sostenida—número de aciertos (A)—y el control de impulsividad—inverso al número de errores (E)—. El Índice de Control de Impulsividad (ICI) ha sido calculado con la siguiente fórmula: ICI = A-E/A+E. La muestra normativa está formada por 1090 niños (72% varones) con edades entre 6 y 10 años, extraídos aleatoriamente de las escuelas locales. El TPD se ha aplicado también a una muestra clínica de 66 sujetos del mismo rango etario; 36 con trastorno por déficit de atención e hiperactividad (TDAH) y 30 con trastorno del aprendizaje de la lectura (DLX) sin TDAH, según DSM-IV/CIE-10. Todos tienen cociente intellectual >85. Se presentan los datos normativos de las variables evaluadas (Aciertos e ICI) en la muestra poblacional. El grupo clínico obtiene peor rendimiento que el grupo normativo en ambas variables (ANOVA: p<0.01), y el grupo TDAH rinde más bajo en ICI que el DLX (t de Student: p<0.01). El ICI posee buen poder discriminante: el 64% de los participantes con TDAH rinden por debajo de −1.5 s y esto solo ocurre en el 3% de la muestra normativa. Estos resultados son congruentes con la existencia de un déficit importante en el control inhibitorio en el TDAH. Esta forma de utilización del TPD puede usarse complementariamente en la identificación de niños con TDAH.


Journal of Child Neurology | 2015

Procedural Learning in Children With Developmental Coordination, Reading, and Attention Disorders.

Sara Magallón; Nerea Crespo-Eguílaz; Juan Narbona

The aim is to assess repetition-based learning of procedures in children with developmental coordination disorder (DCD), reading disorder (RD) and attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). Participants included 187 children, studied in 4 groups: (a) DCD comorbid with RD and ADHD (DCD+RD+ADHD) (n = 30); (b) RD comorbid with ADHD (RD+ADHD) (n = 48); (c) ADHD (n = 19); and typically developing children (control group) (n = 90). Two procedural learning tasks were used: Assembly learning and Mirror drawing. Children were tested on 4 occasions for each task: 3 trials were consecutive and the fourth trial was performed after an interference task. Task performance by DCD+RD+ADHD children improved with training (P < .05); however, the improvement was significantly lower than that achieved by the other groups (RD+ADHD, ADHD and controls) (P < .05). In conclusion, children with DCD+RD+ADHD improve in their use of cognitive-motor procedures over a short training period. Aims of intervention in DCD+RD+ADHD should be based on individual learning abilities.


Frontiers in Human Neuroscience | 2014

Procedural skills and neurobehavioral freedom

Nerea Crespo-Eguílaz; Sara Magallón; Juan Narbona

This work has been supported by grants from the Government of Navarra and the Fundacion Fuentes Dutor (Pamplona, Spain) for research in developmental neurology and neuropsychology (2009–2013).


European Journal of Paediatric Neurology | 2016

Prevalence of sleep disorders and their relationship with core symptoms of inattention and hyperactivity in children with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder

Rosario Vélez-Galarraga; Francisco Guillén-Grima; Nerea Crespo-Eguílaz; Rocío Sánchez-Carpintero

OBJECTIVES To determine the prevalence of sleep disorders in children with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and in a control population. To examine the relationship between sleep disorders and symptoms of inattention, hyperactivity/impulsiveness and executive dysfunction. MATERIALS AND METHODS We studied 126 children with ADHD and 1036 control children aged between 5 and 18 years old. Caregivers completed the Pediatric Sleep Questionnaire and the ADHD Rating Scale (ADHD-RS). Children with ADHD were subsequently assessed for executive function with the Conners Continuous Performance Test (CPT) or with AULA Nesplora. RESULTS Children with ADHD slept less at night and were more likely to display sleep-related rhythmic movements. Children in the ADHD group who were under 12 years old and who had total ADHD-RS scores over the 90th percentile had more difficulty falling asleep than other children; there was also a relationship between total ADHD-RS scores over the 90th percentile and certain parasomnias in the control population. There was a correlation between shorter duration of night-time sleep and omission errors in children who were 12 or older and who were under pharmacological treatment for ADHD. Bedtime resistance and difficulty falling sleep were more frequent in children with ADHD whose symptoms were not treated pharmacologically, than in children receiving treatment. INTERPRETATION Symptoms of inattention and hyperactivity are correlated with impaired sleep duration and quality; specifically, there is an association between ADHD symptoms and problems falling asleep and parasomnias, however, the current study does not address the nature and direction of causality. Children with ADHD and receiving methylphenidate had fewer sleep disorders, suggesting that, at least in some children, stimulant treatment is associated with improvement of some aspects of sleep. Shorter sleep duration in adolescents under pharmacological treatment for ADHD tended to result in more errors of omission, suggesting that it is important to promote good sleep habits in this population.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Acquisition of Motor and Cognitive Skills through Repetition in Typically Developing Children

Sara Magallón; Juan Narbona; Nerea Crespo-Eguílaz

Background Procedural memory allows acquisition, consolidation and use of motor skills and cognitive routines. Automation of procedures is achieved through repeated practice. In children, improvement in procedural skills is a consequence of natural neurobiological development and experience. Methods The aim of the present research was to make a preliminary evaluation and description of repetition-based improvement of procedures in typically developing children (TDC). Ninety TDC children aged 6–12 years were asked to perform two procedural learning tasks. In an assembly learning task, which requires predominantly motor skills, we measured the number of assembled pieces in 60 seconds. In a mirror drawing learning task, which requires more cognitive functions, we measured time spent and efficiency. Participants were tested four times for each task: three trials were consecutive and the fourth trial was performed after a 10-minute nonverbal interference task. The influence of repeated practice on performance was evaluated by means of the analysis of variance with repeated measures and the paired-sample test. Correlation coefficients and simple linear regression test were used to examine the relationship between age and performance. Results TDC achieved higher scores in both tasks through repetition. Older children fitted more pieces than younger ones in assembling learning and they were faster and more efficient at the mirror drawing learning task. Conclusions These findings indicate that three consecutive trials at a procedural task increased speed and efficiency, and that age affected basal performance in motor-cognitive procedures.


Journal of Attention Disorders | 2018

Anti-Basal Ganglia Antibodies and Streptococcal Infection in ADHD:

Sergio Aguilera-Albesa; Nerea Crespo-Eguílaz; José Luis del Pozo; Pablo Villoslada; Rocío Sánchez-Carpintero

Objective: Group A Streptococcus has been associated with ADHD, tic disorders (TD), and obsessive–compulsive disorder (OCD) through anti-basal ganglia antibodies (ABGA). Method: We investigated the association between ABGA and streptococcal exposure with behavioral, motor, and cognitive measures in 38 children with ADHD not comorbid to OCD or TD (nc-ADHD) and in 38 healthy children. An additional group of 15 children with TD and/or OCD was examined. Results: ABGA titers were present in 3% of nc-ADHD patients and controls but in 27% of TD and/or OCD patients. Evidence of streptococcal exposure was similar between ADHD patients and controls living in the same urban area. Behavioral, motor, and cognitive measures were not associated with anti-streptococcal antibodies. Conclusion: ABGA do not distinguish nc-ADHD from controls. The differences in the frequency of streptococcal exposure in previous studies are determined by the dynamic nature of the infection rather than the behavioral phenotype of ADHD.


Anales De Pediatria | 2015

Motricidad fetal durante el segundo trimestre de gestación: estudio ecográfico longitudinal

C. Reynoso; Nerea Crespo-Eguílaz; J.L. Alcázar; Juan Narbona

INTRODUCTION The aim of this research is to contribute to knowledge of the normal spontaneous motor behavior of the human fetus during the second trimester of pregnancy. This study focuses on five patterns of spontaneous fetal movement: startle (S), axo-rhizomelic rhythmia (ARR), axial stretching (AS), general movement (GM), and diaphragmatic contraction (DC). METHODS A cohort of 13 subjects was followed up using 2D obstetrical ultrasound images at 12, 16, 20, and 24 weeks of gestation. As inclusion criteria, neonatal neurological examination and general movements after eutocic delivery at term were normal in all of the subjects, and their neuromotor and cognitive development until the end of pre-school age were also normal. RESULTS All these five motor patterns are present at the beginning of the 2(nd) gestational trimester, but their quantitative and qualitative traits are diverse according to gestational ages. The phasic, isolated or rhythmically repeated movements, S and ARR, are prominent at 12 and 16 weeks of gestation, and then their presence gradually diminishes. By contrast, tonic and complex AS and GM movements increase their presence and quality at 20 and 24 weeks. RAR constitute a particular periodic motor pattern not described in previous literature. Moreover, the incidence of DC is progressive throughout the trimester, in clusters of 2-6 arrhythmic and irregular beats. Fetal heart rate increases during fetal motor active periods. CONCLUSIONS All five normal behavioral patterns observed in the ultrasounds reflect the progressive tuning of motor generators in human nervous system during mid-pregnancy.


Revista De Neurologia | 2012

Plasticidad cerebral para el lenguaje en el niño y el adolescente

Juan Narbona; Nerea Crespo-Eguílaz


Anales De Pediatria | 2009

Estilo comportamental al inicio del segundo ano de vida: estudio retrospectivo en escolares afectados de trastorno por deficit de atencion e hiperactividad

Sara Magallón; Nerea Crespo-Eguílaz; M. Ecay; M.L. Poch-Olivé; Juan Narbona

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