Abstract

<p>Youth with learning disabilities (LD) often experience challenge with attention, a keystone process critical for development and effective functioning in academic, social, emotional, and behavioural spheres. Difficulties experienced across these domains can heighten levels of daily stress. To date, little research has examined the impact of stress on attention in youth with LD. Further, research completed with similar populations has employed stress-induction tasks that may be less developmentally salient for youth. This three-study dissertation addresses these limitations in a sample of youth with LD (n = 13) and without LD (n = 12). The first study explores the impact of LD status on baseline differences in attention on a “cold” (non-emotionally salient) attention task. Behavioural performance accuracy and event-related potentials (ERPs) captured from electroencephalographic recordings serve as indices of attention. The second study explores the impact of a social stressor (the Cyberball paradigm) on self-reported ostracism and neural indices of attention and emotion regulation, and if youth’s response differs depending on the presence of an LD. The third study explores LD-related differences in ‘hot’ (emotionally evocative) attention by examining differences in behavioural and ERP indices before and after exposure to the social stressor. Across the three studies, findings indicated that attention differed by LD status. Group differences in attention were found in both emotionally neutral (“cold”) and stress-induced (“hot”) contexts, with significantly greater attentional challenges noted in the LD group. Youth with LD were also found to experience greater ostracism than youth without LD in the context of intermittent rejection. These results suggest that the impact of social stress on neural indices of attention is greater for youth with LD, and that youth with LD are more sensitive to occasional rejection cues, even before rejection is experienced persistently. Findings are discussed alongside methodological considerations for future research examining stress and attention, including the potential benefits of examining group-level grand average ERP waveforms over the more traditional examination of peak ERP amplitudes. This research furthers our understanding of the challenges associated with LD, and along with future research may lead to improvements in psychosocial interventions that promote positive developmental trajectories for these youth.</p>

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