| Literature DB >> 21029446 |
Gráinne McLoughlin1, Bjoern Albrecht, Tobias Banaschewski, Aribert Rothenberger, Daniel Brandeis, Philip Asherson, Jonna Kuntsi.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a common neurodevelopmental disorder that starts in childhood and frequently persists in adults. Several theories postulate deficits in ADHD that have effects across many executive functions or in more narrowly defined aspects, such as response inhibition. Electrophysiological studies on children, however, indicate that ADHD is not associated with a core deficit of response inhibition, as abnormal inhibitory processing is typically preceded or accompanied by other processing deficits. It is not yet known if this pattern of abnormal processing is evident in adult ADHD.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21029446 PMCID: PMC2988695 DOI: 10.1186/1744-9081-6-66
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Behav Brain Funct ISSN: 1744-9081 Impact factor: 3.759
Number of sweeps per stimulus, task and group
| CPT-OX | CPT-OX with flankers | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Controls | ADHD | Controls | ADHD | |
| 73.70 (6.68) | 72.06 (11.42) | 75.30 (6.50) | 75.94 (5.03) | |
| 35.95 (4.58) | 34.65 (5.84) | 37.90 (2.51) | 35.71 (3.92) | |
| 36.90 (3.63) | 35.94 (5.44) | 37.35 (3.90) | 37.41 (3.32) | |
Measures of overall performance in both tasks
| CPT-OX | CPT-OX with flankers | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean (SD) | Controls | ADHD | Controls | ADHD |
| 371.43 (80.45) | 473.54 (119.78) | 377.76 (55.40) | 468.79 (106.54) | |
| 71.86 (32.44) | 138.85 (65.81) | 69.13 (36.18) | 129.16 (62.21) | |
| 0.19 (0.06) | 0.29 (0.11) | 0.18 (0.07) | 0.27 (0.09) | |
| 0.1 (0.31) | 0.57 (0.98) | 1.0 (1.34) | 0.57 (1.12) | |
| 0.45 (0.60) | 1.33 (1.56) | 0.45 (1.00) | 2.19 (4.74) | |
| 0.6 (1.39) | 3.23 (4.24) | 0.45 (0.69) | 2.76 (3.35) | |
MRT: mean reaction time in milliseconds; SD-RT: within-subject variability in RTs in milliseconds; CV: coefficient of variation (SD-RT/MRT)
Amplitude and latency of ERP components
| Amplitude | Latency | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6.45 (2.53) | 4.43 (1.91) | 396.88 (47.55) | 398.85(63.11) | |||
| -3.21 (2.49) | -2.09 (1.22) | # | # | |||
| 7.64 (3.49) | 5.89 (2.60) | 338.09 (33.23) | 336.35(49.97) | |||
| -3.68 (3.73) | -1.82 (3.32) | 253.32 (35.51) | 261.92(38.22) | |||
| 7.45 (3.71) | 5.38 (2.63) | 341.99 (31.13) | 360.68(49.56) | |||
| -4.44 (3.44) | -2.88 (2.57) | 240.43 (28.38) | 250.59(25.80) | |||
| 5.49(1.92) | 3.41(1.63) | 407.81 (67.84) | 343.97(95.41) | |||
| -3.72 (2.25) | -1.88 (1.30) | # | # | |||
| 7.71 (3.14) | 6.90 (4.17) | 364.65 (49.74) | 374.13(60.57) | |||
| -3.67 (2.39) | -2.95 (3.14) | 242.38 (33.01) | 251.09(41.96) | |||
| 7.56 (3.23) | 4.57 (3.17) | 366.99 (34.95) | 373.05(56.28) | |||
| -5.20 (2.97) | -4.31 (2.57) | 248.63 (26.86) | 260.42(25.98) | |||
# there is no latency measure of the CNV
Figure 1Grand mean ERPs to cue and no-go stimuli, separately for the control group and the ADHD group. Red line represents controls; black line represents participants with ADHD. Ticks on horizontal axes represent 100 ms.
Figure 2Isocontour maps derived for the grand-average at the peak latency of the cue-P3 and the no-go-P3 for each group, plus t-maps for the group comparison.