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Association between salivary alpha-amylase and executive functioning in healthy children. The spanish journal of psychology

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Identificadores
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10481/101341
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/sjp.2019.26
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Statistiques d'usage de visualisation
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Auteur
López Rojas, Cristina
Materia
children
 
executive funtioning
 
saliva
 
alpha-amylase
 
ENFEN
 
Date
2019-05-14
Referencia bibliográfica
Maldonado, E., Nislin, M., Marín, L., Martín-Escribano, A., Enguix, A., López, C., Magarín, A., Alamo, A., Ortiz, P., Muñoz, M., & García, S. (2019). Association between Salivary Alpha-Amylase and Executive Functioning in Healthy Children. The Spanish Journal of Psychology, 22, E24. https://doi.org/10.1017/sjp.2019.26
Patrocinador
Universidad de Málaga
Résumé
The main aim of this study was to confirm the relationship between executive performance and salivary alpha-amylase (SAA) activity in a sample of 64 healthy children (39 boys), and compare it to the association of SAA output and salivary flow rate (SFR). Executive functioning was assessed via fluency, trail-making, rings and inhibition tasks from the Batería de Evaluación Neuropsicológica de la Función Ejecutiva en Niños [Battery of Neuropsychological Assessment for Executive Function in Children] (ENFEN), merged into an ENFEN total score. SAA activity, output, and SFR were measured at baseline, one minute before, and one minute after the end of a neuropsychological testing session. Our results confirmed a direct, linear and significant association between SAA activity and executive functioning, r(64) = .351, p < .05, and extended it to SAA output, r(64) =.431, p < .05. The mean level of SAA output was the best predictor of executive functioning (β = .431, p < .05) and explained 18.2 % of the variance in ENFEN total score. In sum, and compared to SAA activity, measuring SAA output may be a more precise and indirect marker to assess executive functioning in children.
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