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Dive into the research topics where Silja Pirila is active.

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Featured researches published by Silja Pirila.


Journal of Child Neurology | 2011

Executive Functions in Youth With Spastic Cerebral Palsy

Silja Pirila; Jaap J. van der Meere; Kati Rantanen; Maria Jokiluoma; Kai Eriksson

Dependent on criteria used, between 35% and 53% of the participants with cerebral palsy fulfilled the criteria of clinically relevant executive function problems as defined by Conners’ (1994) Continuous Performance Test. Executive function problems were noticed mainly in participants with bilateral brain lesions and who had been born preterm. Findings highlight the need to check for attention problems in children with cerebral palsy.


Handbook of medical neuropsychology. Methods and applications of cognitive neuroscience | 2010

Cerebral Palsy: Effects of Early Brain Injury on Development

Silja Pirila; Jaap J. van der Meere

The term cerebral palsy (CP) was originally coined more than a century ago and loosely translated as brain paralysis. A precise definition has remained elusive because CP is not a single diagnosis but an umbrella term describing nonprogressive brain lesions involving motor and postural abnormalities that are noted during early development [1]. Recently, the executive committee for the definition of cerebral palsy has proposed a new definition: CP is a multi-faceted phenomenon wherein motor limitations are often accompanied by disturbances of sensation, cognition, communication, perception, and behaviour, by epilepsy, and by secondary musculoskeletal problems. Other complications include among others feeding difficulties, pain, and functional gastrointestinal abnormalities contributing to bowel obstruction, vomiting, and constipation [2]


Child Neuropsychology | 2008

Impulsive Responses In Children with Conduct Disorder and Borderline Intellectual Functioning

Jaap J. van der Meere; Dirk-Jan van der Meer; Hanns J Kunert; Norbert Borger; Silja Pirila

The study is designed to investigate response inhibition in children with conduct disorder and borderline intellectual functioning. To this end, children are compared to a normal peer control group using the Alertness test. The test has two conditions. In one condition, children are instructed to push a response button after a visual “go” signal is presented on the screen. In a second condition the “go” signal is preceded by an auditory signal, telling the child that a target stimulus will occur soon. Compared to the control group, the group carrying the dual diagnosis made many preliminary responses (responses before the presentation of the “go” signal), especially in the condition with an auditory signal. This impulsive response style was controlled for attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder characteristics of the children.


Journal of Child Neurology | 2011

Visual Attention Study in Youth With Spastic Cerebral Palsy Using the Event-Related Potential Method

Elina Hakkarainen; Silja Pirila; Jukka Kaartinen; Kai Eriksson; Jaap J. van der Meere

Youth with mild spastic cerebral palsy (n = 14) and a peer control group were compared on an oddball paradigm. Here, visual stimuli were presented with low and high probability and participants were instructed to count in silence the number of rare stimuli. The infrequent stimulus typically elicits an enhanced frontal central N2 and a centroparietal P300 event-related brain potential, reflecting orientation and evaluation of stimulus novelty. No differences in latency and amplitude of the N2–P300 complex were found between the 2 groups, indicating that some fundamental attention processes are intact in youth with mild spastic cerebral palsy.


Child Neuropsychology | 2010

Interference Control in Children with First Episode Major Depression: A Brief Report

Jaap J. van der Meere; Norbert Borger; Silja Pirila; Floyed Sallee

The ability to deal with sources of conflict, that is, interference control, was evaluated in a group of 11 children with first episode Major Depression and a peer control group. To this end, the Eriksen and Schultz (1979) task was used. Here, the participant is presented with a stimulus that simultaneously activates two conflicting response channels: One response is activated by the instructions, whereas the other response is activated by elements in the array that strongly invite an alternative — yet incorrect — response. Findings provided no evidence for an undisturbed interference control nor impaired overall processing speed in children with first episode Major Depression.


Journal of Child Neurology | 2012

Stimulus Evaluation, Event Preparation, and Motor Action Planning in Young Patients With Mild Spastic Cerebral Palsy: An Event-Related Brain Potential Study

Elina Hakkarainen; Silja Pirila; Jukka Kaartinen; Jaap J. van der Meere

The study investigated stimulus evaluation time, event preparation, and motor action planning of patients with mild spastic cerebral palsy and a peer control group in the age range of 9 to 18 years. To this end, participants were carrying out a stimulus recognition task. Findings indicated an overall slowness and inaccurate reaction time performance of the patient group. An event-related potential analysis revealed that the stimulus evaluation processing, indexed by the parietal P300, was intact in the group of patients. Also event preparation and action planning, indexed by respectively the frontal late contingent negative variation and the frontal P2, were intact in the group of patients. It was concluded that patients’ motor slowness reflected poor motor execution processes.


Child Neuropsychology | 2012

Visual orientation in hospitalized boys with early onset conduct disorder and borderline intellectual functioning

Jacob van der Meere; Norbert Borger; Silja Pirila

The aim of the present study is to investigate visual orientation in hospitalized boys with severe early onset conduct disorder and borderline intellectual functioning. It is tested whether boys with the dual diagnosis have a stronger action-oriented response style to visual-cued go signals than the norm. To this end, boys with the dual diagnosis were compared with a peer control group on Posners (1980) visual-spatial detection test. Here, on each trial, a visual cue points either in the direction of the location of a subsequent go signal (valid cue), or points in the opposite direction away from the location of the subsequent go signal (invalid cue). Findings indicated superior orientation (a strong action-oriented response style) of children with the dual diagnosis in valid-cued trials as well as in invalid-cued trials in both the left and the right visual hemifield. Findings were controlled for attention scores on the Child Behavior Checklist -Teacher Form and IQ scores.


Child Neuropsychology | 2009

Very Low Birth Weight and Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder

Jaap J. van der Meere; Norbert Borger; S.T. Potgieter; Silja Pirila; Paul De Cock

It is well recognized that reaction time performance of term-born children with a normal birth weight (NBW > 2500 g) who fulfill the DSM-IV criteria for attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in the primary school age is sensitive for the presentation rate of stimuli. They have been found to perform more poorly in conditions of relatively slow event rates as compared with fast event rates. The purpose of the current study was to explore whether reaction time performance of children with very low birth weight (VLBW < 1500 g) with or without ADHD showed the same sensitivity for the factor presentation rate of stimuli compared to children with a normal birth weight plus ADHD. To this end, reaction time performance of four groups of children was compared on a Go/No-Go test with a fast presentation rate of 1 second and a slow presentation rate of 6 seconds. Groups were: children with VLBW plus ADHD, children with VLBW only, children born full term with normal birth weight (NBW >2500 g) plus ADHD, and children born full term without ADHD (the control group). Findings indicated that, compared to the non-ADHD groups, the groups with ADHD (NBW and VLBW) showed a more dramatic decline in their reaction time performance in the slow condition: a state regulation deficit. In addition, both groups showed a response inhibition deficit. No difference was found in reaction time performance between the groups of children with VLBW only and the control group.


Journal of Child Neurology | 2015

Brain State Before Error Making in Young Patients With Mild Spastic Cerebral Palsy

Elina Hakkarainen; Silja Pirila; Jukka Kaartinen; Jaap J. van der Meere

In the present experiment, children with mild spastic cerebral palsy and a control group carried out a memory recognition task. The key question was if errors of the patient group are foreshadowed by attention lapses, by weak motor preparation, or by both. Reaction times together with event-related potentials associated with motor preparation (frontal late contingent negative variation), attention (parietal P300), and response evaluation (parietal error-preceding positivity) were investigated in instances where 3 subsequent correct trials preceded an error. The findings indicated that error responses of the patient group are foreshadowed by weak motor preparation in correct trials directly preceding an error.


Journal of Child Neurology | 2013

Error Detection and Response Adjustment in Youth With Mild Spastic Cerebral Palsy: An Event-Related Brain Potential Study

Elina Hakkarainen; Silja Pirila; Jukka Kaartinen; Jaap J. van der Meere

This study evaluated the brain activation state during error making in youth with mild spastic cerebral palsy and a peer control group while carrying out a stimulus recognition task. The key question was whether patients were detecting their own errors and subsequently improving their performance in a future trial. Findings indicated that error responses of the group with cerebral palsy were associated with weak motor preparation, as indexed by the amplitude of the late contingent negative variation. However, patients were detecting their errors as indexed by the amplitude of the response-locked negativity and thus improved their performance in a future trial. Findings suggest that the consequence of error making on future performance is intact in a sample of youth with mild spastic cerebral palsy. Because the study group is small, the present findings need replication using a larger sample.

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Jukka Kaartinen

University of Jyväskylä

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Paul De Cock

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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