| Literature DB >> 26563880 |
R Matt Alderson1, Connor H G Patros1, Stephanie J Tarle1, Kristen L Hudec1, Lisa J Kasper1, Sarah E Lea1.
Abstract
Working memory (WM) and behavioral inhibition impairments have garnered significant attention as candidate core features, endophenotypes, and/or associated neurocognitive deficits of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). The relationship between ADHD-related WM and inhibition deficits remains relatively unclear, however, with inferences about the constructs' directional relationship stemming predominantly from correlational research. The current study utilized a dual-task paradigm to experimentally examine the relationship between ADHD-related WM and behavioral inhibition deficits. A total of 31 boys (15 ADHD and 16 typically developing [TD]) aged 8-12 years completed WM (1-back and 2-back), behavioral inhibition (stop-signal task [SST]), and dual-condition (1-back/SST and 2-back/SST) experimental tasks. Children with ADHD exhibited significant, large-magnitude WM deficits for the 1-back condition but were not significantly different from children in the TD group for the 2-back, 1-back/SST, and 2-back/SST conditions. Children with ADHD also exhibited significant inhibition deficits for the SST, 1-back/SST, and 2-back/SST conditions, but the within-group effect was not significant. The findings suggest that ADHD-related stop-signal demands are upstream, or compete for, resources involved in controlled-focused attention and/or other central executive (CE), WM processes.Entities:
Keywords: ADHD; behavioral inhibition; executive function; models; working memory
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26563880 DOI: 10.1080/09297049.2015.1105207
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Child Neuropsychol ISSN: 0929-7049 Impact factor: 2.500