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Journal Article

Citation

Banz BC, Wu J, Crowley MJ, Potenza MN, Mayes LC. Yale J. Biol. Med. 2016; 89(2): 143-151.

Affiliation

Yale Child Study Center, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, CT; Developmental Electrophysiology Laboratory, Yale Child Study Center, New Haven, CT.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2016, Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

27354841

Abstract

Adolescence and prenatal cocaine exposure can impact risk-taking. In this study, we evaluated risk-taking and gender-related differences in adolescents with prenatal cocaine exposure in terms of electrophysiological correlates of inhibitory control and sustained attention. No differences related to gender were found within measures of risk-taking, or electrophysiological response relating to risk-taking. Greater responses during inhibition versus attention trials support previous studies, with boys showing the largest responses. Gender-related differences were found when comparing the trials before and after frustration was induced, with greater initial attention indices for girls in both trial types and greater sustained attention for both genders during inhibition trials and for boys during attention trials. These data suggest neural correlates of response inhibition show important gender-related differences in this population. Considering these relationships allows us to further understand underlying processes among adolescents who, as a group, tend to be more inclined toward greater risk behaviors.


Language: en

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