Abstract

Delayed consequences of a sharp shortening of the prenatal period for the formation of handedness and the function of visuospatial attention were analyzed. The test group consisted of 16 small premature (SP) children at a corrected age of 13–14 months. The functional asymmetry was assessed by means of the A-not-B neuropsychological task, which is arranged in such a way that a child has to look for an attractive object in either a left or a right location. As compared to healthy children of the same age, the functional asymmetry of SP children was characterized by the absence of right-handedness. During the performance of the A-not-B trials, the SP children displayed a distinct left-side asymmetry: trials with an object hidden to the right of the child were significantly more frequently erroneous than those with a left-side position of the object. It is suggested that SP children have problems with disengagement of the attentional focus from an object located in the left half-field of vision under the conditions of shifting the attention to the right half-field. Probably, one of the consequences of a sharp decrease in the period of prenatal development is abnormal lateralization of some brain functions.

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