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L87 Thesis_final_051218_Redacted.pdf (2.46 MB)

Very preterm goal setting deficits and associated neural substrates at 13 years of age

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thesis
posted on 2019-03-13, 04:11 authored by KRISTINA MAREE HAEBICH
This thesis highlights significant goal setting difficulties (i.e., planning, organisation, strategic reasoning) experienced by very preterm children during late childhood, which are likely to have academic, social and vocational functional consequences. Goal setting deficits were found to be associated with early risk factors, including neonatal brain abnormalities and brain volumes, highlighting the potential utility of neonatal MRI for identifying very preterm children at risk for later executive dysfunction. This thesis also investigated functional connectivity networks underlying prematurity as a brain network disorder, contributing to the previously limited understanding of how neural connectivity underlies very preterm goal setting deficits during late childhood.

History

Principal supervisor

Catherine Willmott

Additional supervisor 1

Peter Anderson

Additional supervisor 2

Deanne Thompson

Year of Award

2018

Department, School or Centre

Psychological Sciences

Additional Institution or Organisation

School of Psychological Sciences, Clayton Campus

Campus location

Australia

Course

Doctor of Psychology in Clinical Neuropsychology

Degree Type

DOCTORATE

Faculty

Faculty of Medicine Nursing and Health Sciences