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Medicine and Health Sciences Commons

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Neurology

Series

2006

sustained attention to response at task (SART)

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Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences

Measuring Sustained Attention After Traumatic Brain Injury: Differences In Key Findings From The Sustained Attention To Response Task (Sart), John Whyte, Patricia Grieb-Neff, Christopher Gantz, Marcia Polansky Jan 2006

Measuring Sustained Attention After Traumatic Brain Injury: Differences In Key Findings From The Sustained Attention To Response Task (Sart), John Whyte, Patricia Grieb-Neff, Christopher Gantz, Marcia Polansky

Department of Rehabilitation Medicine Faculty Papers

Clinical reports after traumatic brain injury (TBI) suggest frequent difficulties with sustained attention, but their objective measurement has proved difficult. In 1997, Robertson and colleagues reported on a new sustained attention assessment tool, the sustained attention to response task (SART). Individuals with TBI were reported to produce more errors of commission on the SART than control participants, and both groups showed a relationship between SART errors and everyday lapses of attention as measured by the cognitive failures questionnaire (CFQ). Although few direct replications of these findings have been reported, the SART has been used widely as a measure of sustained …