| Literature DB >> 26779082 |
Jana Tegelbeckers1, Laura Schares1, Annette Lederer1, Bjoern Bonath1, Hans-Henning Flechtner1, Kerstin Krauel2.
Abstract
Task-irrelevant salient stimuli involuntarily capture attention and can lead to distraction from an ongoing task, especially in children with ADHD. However, there has been tentative evidence that the presentation of novel sounds can have beneficial effects on cognitive performance. In the present study, we aimed to investigate the influence of novel sounds compared to no sound and a repeatedly presented standard sound on attentional performance in children and adolescents with and without ADHD. We therefore had 32 patients with ADHD and 32 typically developing children and adolescents (8 to 13 years) execute a flanker task in which each trial was preceded either by a repeatedly presented standard sound (33%), an unrepeated novel sound (33%) or no auditory stimulation (33%). Task-irrelevant novel sounds facilitated attentional performance similarly in children with and without ADHD, as indicated by reduced omission error rates, reaction times, and reaction time variability without compromising performance accuracy. By contrast, standard sounds, while also reducing omission error rates and reaction times, led to increased commission error rates. Therefore, the beneficial effect of novel sounds exceeds cueing of the target display by potentially increased alerting and/or enhanced behavioral control.Entities:
Keywords: ADHD; attention; distraction; flanker task; novelty
Year: 2016 PMID: 26779082 PMCID: PMC4700136 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2015.01970
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Characteristics of the ADHD sample and the comparison group of typically developing children (TD).
| ADHD | TD | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Measure | Mean (± | Mean (± | (paired) |
| Gender | 31 male, 5 female | 31 male, 5 female | |
| Age | 10.61 (±1.61) | 10.58 (±1.71) | 0.71 |
| IQ (CFT-20-R/CFT-1) | 101.92 (±13.76) | 110.08 (±11.97) | 2.69∗∗ |
| Attentional Performance (d2/bp-test) | 54.36 (±30.46) | 74.56 (±24.42) | 3.10∗∗ |
| Verbal Learning and Memory Test | |||
| - Learning | 48.89 (±10.44) | 54.2 (±8.93) | 2.3∗ |
| - Delayed recall | 50.38 (±8.87) | 55.13 (±8.32) | 2.33∗ |
| - Recognition | 48.74 (±10.2) | 55.71 (±10.82) | 2.77∗∗ |
| Attentional Problems (self-rating, YSR) | 60.42 (±8.44) | 53.00 (±5.11) | 7.62∗∗∗ |
| Attentional Problems (parental rating, CBCL) | 67.71 (±7.06) | 55.10 (±5.34) | 3.23∗∗ |
Overview over the 2 × 3 ANOVAs including group (ADHD vs. TD) and sound (standard vs. novel vs. no sound).
| Main Effect | Main Effect | Interaction Effect | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| η | η | η | ||||
| Commission error rate | 12.83∗∗ | 0.172 | 8.45∗∗ | 0.12 | 0.17 (0.819) | 0.003 |
| Omission error rate | 14.47∗∗∗ | 0.189 | 11.99∗∗∗ | 0.162 | 1.21 (0.29) | 0.019 |
| Mean reaction time | 3.79 (0.056) | 0.058 | 51.65 ∗∗∗ | 0.454 | 2.28 (0.115) | 0.035 |
| Reaction time variability | 13.21∗∗ | 0.176 | 3.53∗ | 0.054 | 0.69 (0.502) | 0.011 |