| Anastopoulos et al. (2011) | Age 5–12 years
n = 358ADHD 74 % (ADHD-C, 52.8 %; ADHD-PI, 36.6 %; ADHD-HI, 10.6 %) | Parent-completed Conners’ Rating Scales–RevisedBehavior assessment system for children–2nd edition | 46.92 % of the children affected by ADHD displayed significantly elevated levels of emotional lability versus 15.38 % of those without this disorderEmotional lability was strongly associated with both aggression and depression; deficits in the self-regulation of emotion may serve as a marker for these comorbid outcomes |
| Beauchaine et al. (2013) | Age 4–6 years
n = 99 (ADHD) |
Psychopathology measures
Child Symptom InventoryChild behavior checklistEyberg Child Behavior InventoryConners’ Parent Rating Scale–RevisedSocial Competence Scale
Cardiovascular measures
Cardiac pre-ejection periodRespiratory sinus arrhythmia | Lengthened cardiac pre-ejection period at rest and reduced pre-ejection period reactivity to incentives led to higher scores on measures of conduct problems and aggressionLower baseline respiratory sinus arrhythmia and greater respiratory sinus arrhythmia withdrawal led to lower scores on prosocial behaviorGreater respiratory sinus arrhythmia withdrawal led to lower scores on emotion regulation |
| Berlin et al. (2004) | Age 7–10 yearsTotal, n = 63ADHD, n = 21; ODD, n = 7; TS, n = 4; DCD, n = 3; dyslexia, n = 8; control, n = 42 | Go/No-Go taskStroop-like taskKaufman hand movements testPuzzle cheating taskEmotion regulation using a parental rating scale (Rydell et al. 2003)Story reconstruction test | Children with ADHD differed significantly from controls with regard to measures of inhibition as well as all other executive function measures, except repetition of hand movementsIn logistic regression models, three different measures (tapping inhibition, working memory, and emotion regulation) were shown to be significant independent predictors of group membershipChildren with ADHD differed from controls when studying mean group differences in all of the components in Barkley’s model; the measures discriminated well between groups; the results concerning independent effects pointed to inhibition and working memory as salient aspects |
| Braaten and Rosen (2000) | Age 6–12 yearsADHD, n = 24; controls, n = 19 | Developmental Questionnaire (Gordon 1995)Peabody picture vocabulary test-revisedEmpathy response task (Ricard and Kamberk-Kilicci 1995)Emotions behavior checklistEmotional Intensity Scale for ChildrenEmotional reactions to external Contingencies Scale for children | Children with ADHD were less likely than those without ADHD to match their emotion with the emotion of a child in a story eliciting negative emotions and gave significantly fewer character-centered interpretations in their descriptions of the character’s emotionChildren with ADHD appear to show more negative emotion, particularly depression, anger, and guilt, than do children without ADHD; children with ADHD may be able to self-regulate their positive emotions but not negative emotions |
| Brotman et al. (2010) | Age 8–17 yearsADHD, n = 18; BD, n = 43; SMD, n = 29; controls, n = 37 | Children’s Depression Rating ScaleYoung Mania Rating ScaleWhole brain blood-oxygen level-dependent functional MRI | Relative to healthy comparison participants, patients with ADHD manifested hyperactivation in the left, but not right, amygdalaSignificant group effect in the left amygdala, with patients with severe mood dysregulation showing hyperactivationWhile rating subjective fear of neutral faces, youths with ADHD demonstrated left amygdala hyperactivity relative to the other three groups, whereas youths with severe mood dysregulation demonstrated hypoactivity |
| Gow et al. (2013) | Age (StDev)ADHD, 14.46 (1.12) yearsControls, 14.00 (1.10) yearsADHD, n = 31; controls, n = 39 | Event-related potentialsElectroencephalogramsBlood analysis | Children with ADHD had lower mean omega-3/6 levels and event-related potential abnormalities in emotion processing, independent of emotional valence relative to control childrenLower omega-3 fatty acid levels were associated with impaired emotion processing in children with ADHD |
| Harty et al. (2009) | Age 7–11 years at initial diagnosis.~10 years follow-upADHD, n = 85 (ODD 52 %, CD 26 %); control, n = 83 | Buss–Perry Aggression QuestionnaireState-Trait Anger Expression Inventory-2 | ADHD plus conduct disorder in childhood led to elevated levels of physical aggression when compared with controls and the ADHD-only group. ADHD plus oppositional defiant disorder led to elevated levels of verbal aggression compared with controlsAdolescents diagnosed with ADHD and comorbid disruptive behavior disorders during childhood reported high levels of aggression associated with increased emotionality in the form of anger, but not hostile cognitions |
| Hulvershorn et al. (2014) | Age (StDev), 9.2 (2.0) years
n = 63 | Kiddie SADS–present and lifetime versionConners’ Teacher Rating Scale–revised, long versionConners’ Parent Rating Scale–revised, long versionResting-state functional MRI | Children with ADHD who were impaired by high emotional lability exhibited aberrant amygdala-cortical intrinsic functional connectivity, i.e., in regions associated with emotion regulationFindings suggested that a subset of youth with ADHD have specific disruptions in amygdala networks that underlie emotion regulation impairmentsResting-state functional connectivity appears to be suitable for detecting emotion relevant differences in intrinsic functional connectivity in youth with ADHD |
| Jensen and Rosen (2004) | Age 6–15 yearsADHD, n = 30; controls, n = 37Depression, BD, OCD, FAS, etc. excluded | Disruptive Behavior Rating Scale–ParentEmotional intensity scale–parent version (Intensity Scale)Emotional reactions to external contingencies scale–parent version | Children with ADHD were rated as significantly more emotionally reactive to both immediate and future events than were children without ADHDDifferences at both the immediate and future time periods were stronger in response to negative as opposed to positive emotional eventsIn response to the consequences of their behavior, children with ADHD were rated as less emotionally reactive than children without ADHD |
| Maedgen and Carlson (2000) | Age 8–11 yearsTotal ADHD, n = 30 (ADHD-C, n = 16; ADHD-I, n = 14); controls, n = 17 | Children’s Assertive Behavior ScaleRevised behavior problem checklistDuncan’s socioeconomic index of occupational statusWide range achievement test–third editionWechsler Intelligence Scale for children–3rd editionFacial and non-facial coding | Children with ADHD–C were rated as showing more aggressive behavior; they displayed emotional dysregulation characterized by high intensity and high levels of both positive and negative behaviorChildren with ADHD–I displayed social passivity and showed deficits in social knowledge on the self-report measure but did not evidence problems in emotional regulationADHD subtypes may benefit from different treatment approaches |
| Martel and Nigg (2006) | Age 6–12 yearsADHD, n = 92 (ADHD-I, n = 24; ADHD-C, n = 68); borderline, n = 35; controls, n = 52 | California child Q-sortEarly Adolescent Temperament Questionnaire | Reactive Control was related to hyperactivity–impulsivity as rated by both parents and teachers. Negative Emotionality was related to oppositional defiance. Resiliency was primarily related to inattention–disorganization as rated by both parents and teachers; Effortful Control was related uniquely to inattention in parent but not teacher dataLow levels of Reactive Control may have led to high levels of hyperactivity–impulsivity, and low levels of resiliency or Effortful Control may have been related to high levels of inattentionChildren with ADHD may have arrived at their disorder via multiple streams of temperamental vulnerability |
| Meehan et al. (2008) | Age 7–10 yearsTotal, n = 42 (27 boys, 15 female)ODD, CD, anxiety disorder, depressive disorder | Schedule for affective disorders and schizophrenia for school aged childrenRorschach inkblot method | Children with greater ADHD symptoms displayed lower scores on variables indicating internal resources for emotional self-regulation and stress tolerance relative to a comparison group |
| Melnick and Hinshaw (2000) | Age 6–12 yearsADHD, n = 45; controls, n = 34 | Video-taped family interactions and summer camp interactions rated by trained observersParenting behaviors rated by assessors based on positive/negative parenting and parents’ ability to self-regulate their own emotionsPeer-nominated sociometric assessments | Differences in emotion regulation were not attributable to severity of ADHD symptomsA generalized difficulty with emotion regulation was not shown in the ADHD population, but was a specific vulnerability among the highly aggressive subgroupEmotion regulation abilities were modestly related to underlying problems with impulse control and hyperactivityThe aggressive subgroup of boys with ADHD had a slight tendency toward more intense emotional reactivity, however, emotional reactivity was predictive of neither core ADHD symptomatology nor social outcomes |
| Musser et al. (2011) | Age 7–9 yearsADHD, n = 32 (ADHD-C, n = 19; ADHD-I, n = 13 [AD, 10 %; OD, 13.3 %; SD, 13.3 %]); controls, n = 34 (AD, 5.6 %; OD, 2.8 %; SD, 2.8 %) | Conners’ Rating ScaleStrengths and Difficulties QuestionnaireWechsler’s intelligence scale for children—4th versionWechsler individual achievement test–2nd editionCardiac pre-ejection periodRespiratory sinus arrhythmia | Children with ADHD displayed a stable pattern of elevated parasympathetic activity across all task conditions compared to baselineADHD in childhood was associated with abnormal parasympathetic mechanisms involved in emotion regulation |
| Musser et al. (2013) | Age 7–11 yearsADHD-C, n = 75 ([ADHD only, n = 54; MD, 3.7 %; AD, 23.9 %; ODD 24.7 %; tic disorder, 3.7 %; SD, 7.1 %]; [ADHD + low prosocial, n = 21; MD, 3.7 %, AD, 4.7 %; ODD 23.8 %; SD, 4.7 %]); controls, n = 75 (MD, 2.7 %; AD, 21.3 %; ODD 8.1 %; SD, 5.4 %) | Strengths and Difficulties QuestionnaireProsocial Behavior ScaleCardiac pre-ejection periodRespiratory sinus arrhythmia | ADHD-typical prosocial group displayed atypically elevated parasympathetic reactivity (emotion dysregulation) during positive induction, along with increased sympathetic activity (elevated arousal)ADHD-low prosocial group displayed reduced parasympathetic reactivity and reduced sympathetic activity (low emotional arousal) across baseline and task conditionsBoth ADHD groups had altered patterns of autonomic functioningIn addition to clinical heterogeneity, results suggested that ADHD is heterogeneous with regard to physiological indices of emotion and regulation |
| Posner et al. (2013) | Age 7–12 yearsADHD, n = 22 (ADHD-C, n = 19; ADHD-I, n = 3 [ODD, n = 6; SAD, n = 1]; controls, n = 20 | DuPaul Barkley ADHD Rating ScaleConners’ Parent Rating Scale–RevisedChild behavior ChecklistHollingshead index of social positionEdinburgh Handedness InventoryWechsler Abbreviated Scale of IntelligenceResting-state functional connectivity MRI | Children with ADHD had reduced connectivity in two neural circuits: one underlying executive attention and the other emotional regulationA double dissociation was seen between these two neural circuits and their behavioral correlatesReduced connectivity in the executive attention circuit correlated with executive attention deficits, but not with emotional labilityReduced connectivity in the emotional regulation circuit correlated with emotional lability, but not with executive attention deficits |
| Rosen et al. (2013) |
Study 1
Age 8–11 yearsADHD, n = 11; (ADHD-C, n = 9; ADHD-I, n = 2); comorbidities, n = 9, including mood, anxiety and behavioral | Ecological momentary assessmentRecurrence quantification analysisEmotion regulation checklistChild behavior ChecklistChildren’s Depression Inventory–2nd edition | A link was established between nonlinear patterning of emotional variability over time and conventional measures of emotional functioningA 4-week parent-reported, but not child-reported, ecological momentary assessment-based protocol was a feasible means of assessing emotion dysregulation in children |
|
Study 2 (subset of study 1)
Age 8–11 yearsADHD, n = 5 (ADHD-C, n = 4; ADHD-I, n = 1) | As above—ecological momentary assessment completed by the child (self-reported) |
| Semrud-Clikeman et al. (2010) | Age 9–17 yearsADHD, n = 64 (ADHD-C, n = 21; ADHD-I, n = 28; AS, n = 15); controls, n = 32 | Woodcock–Johnson cognitive battery IIIDelis–Kaplan executive functioning systemThe structured interview for diagnostic assessment of childrenBehavior Rating Inventory of Executive Function | Children with ADHD-C had significantly more difficulty with behavioral regulation and more difficulty in emotional control compared with children with ADHD-PI or healthy controlsThe Behavior Rating Inventory of Executive Function indicated significant problems in the areas of flexibility, shifting, and inhibition for children with ADHD-CThe ability to be flexible and to shift from one activity to the next was important for social and emotional functioning and development |
| Seymour et al. (2012) | Age 10–14 yearsADHD, n = 37; controls, n = 32ODD, CD, disruptive behavior disorders | Behavioral assessment system for children or adolescents-parent reportChildren’s Depression InventoryEmotion regulation checklistDifficulties in Emotion Regulation Scale | ADHD status was positively related to both depressive symptoms and emotion dysregulation, and depressive symptoms were positively related to emotion dysregulationYouth in the ADHD group demonstrated significantly higher levels of depression and emotion dysregulation than those in the non-ADHD control group |
| Seymour et al. (2014) | Age 9–12 years
n = 227 (156 boys) | Emotion regulation checklist (maternal report)Revised Child Anxiety and Depression Scales (self-report) | Emotion regulation in youth with ADHD was monitored over a 3-year studyEmotion regulation was identified as a potential mechanism linking ADHD and depressive symptoms in these individuals |
| Sjowall et al. (2013) | Age 7–13 yearsADHD, n = 102 [ADHD-C, 70 %; ADHD-HI, 4 %; ADHD-PI, 26 %; (ODD or CD, 46 %; GAD/anxiety NOS, 7 %; OCD, 1 %; TS, 4 %)]; controls, n = 102 | ‘Find the phone’Children’s size-ordering taskDigit spanGo/No-Go taskNavon-like testChoice delay taskEmotion Questionnaire | Children with ADHD differed significantly from controls, except for delay aversion and recognition of disgustExecutive functioning, reaction time variability, and emotional functioning all contributed independently to distinguishing between children with ADHD and controlsEmotional functioning appears to be an area of importance for ADHD that needs to be incorporated into future theoretical models |
| Sorensen et al. (2011) | Age 7–9 yearsADHD, n = 23; ADHD + anxiety, n = 11; anxiety, n = 24CD, TS, OCD, mania, depression, dysthymia excluded from study | Behavior Rating Inventory of executive function | Behavioral dysregulation in ADHD children was aggravated by comorbid anxiety |
| Wahlstedt et al. (2008) | Age 4–6 yearsTotal, n = 87 (ADHD + EF, n = 16; ADHD, n = 19; EF, n = 17); controls, n = 35 | Stroop testGo/No-Go test‘Find the pig’Digit span testNumber of items in a stated categoryParent-reported Prosocial Orientation Scale questionnaire [Rydell et al. (2003)]Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire | Only ADHD symptoms predicted other aspects of socioemotional functioning such as dysfunctional emotional regulation and lower levels of social competenceBoth ADHD symptoms and impaired executive function acted as early predictors of problem behaviors |
| Walcott et al. (2004) | Age 6–11 yearsADHD, n = 26; controls, n = 23 | Stop signal reaction timeCompetitive puzzle task: race to complete Lego puzzle with missing piece
Recorded and coded by trained observersEmotion control condition (half of participants told to hide emotions) | Boys with impulsive ADHD displayed greater behavioral disinhibition and were less effective at emotion regulation than comparison boysBoys with ADHD were unsuccessful in masking their emotions or changing their emotion regulation or disinhibition even when instructed to do so Comparison boys were more successful at emotion regulation when given instruction to self-regulateA small, but significant, relation was seen between executive behavior disinhibition and subsequent deficits in self-regulation of emotion |
| Wiersema and Roeyers (2009) | Age 8–13 yearsADHD, n = 10 (ADHD-C, n = 8; ADHD-HI, n = 2); controls, n = 16 | Disruptive Behavior Disorder Rating ScaleEffortful Control ScaleAttentional Control ScaleGo/No-Go taskElectroencephalogramEvent-related potential | The P3 wave is an event-related potential component elicited in the process of decision making; the N2 is known as a mismatch detector, but has also been found to reflect executive cognitive control functionsChildren scoring high on ADHD symptoms made more errors of commission and showed smaller No-Go P3 amplitudesEffortful Control Scale and Attentional Control Scale scores were not related uniquely to inattention or hyperactive–impulsive symptomsEffortful Control was implicated in ADHD symptomatology, as children scoring high on ADHD symptoms scored low on Effortful Control questionnaires, made more errors of commission, and showed smaller No-Go P3 amplitudes |