Executive function profile of children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder |
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Authors: | Shallice Tim Marzocchi Gian Marco Coser Silvano Del Savio Maria Meuter Renata F Rumiati Raffaella I |
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Affiliation: | a Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience, University College London, England, Program in Cognitive Neuroscience, SISSA, Trieste, Italy.b Program in Cognitive Neuroscience, SISSA, Trieste, Italy, I.R.C.C.S. La Nostra Famiglia, Conegliano and San Vito al Tagliamento, Italy.c I.R.C.C.S. La Nostra Famiglia, Conegliano and San Vito al Tagliamento, Italy.d Program in Cognitive Neuroscience, SISSA, Trieste, Italy, School of Psychology and Counseling, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia.e Program in Cognitive Neuroscience, SISSA, Trieste, Italy. |
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Abstract: | We explored the neuropsychological profile for executive functions of children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) to assess whether problems associated with the two most cited relevant processes-inhibition and attentional problems-were the core of any executive function difficulty. A battery of executive function tests was administered to 31 children with a clinical diagnosis of ADHD and to 33 normal control participants, all aged between 7 and 12. The executive function battery encompassed a number of tasks, selected because each had multiple measures: a sustained attention reaction time task, a related vigilance task, an adaptation of the Hayling Sentence Completion Test, an adaptation of the Brixton Spatial Rule Attainment Test, a Letter Fluency task, a number Stroop task, and an “n-back” working memory task. The overall pattern of the results fit well with those obtained in previous studies as far as abnormalities of the ADHD group in the domain of inhibitory processes, attentional functions, and executive functions. The children with ADHD, although performing well on baseline tasks, performed more poorly than the controls on all the experimental tasks with one borderline exception: Letter Fluency, where the children with ADHD showed a very different pattern than most adult frontal lobe subgroups. However, there was no specific impairment on measures of inhibitory processes. In addition, strategy generation and use were severely affected in the ADHD group. Particular findings fitted well with disorders of a high-level effort system and of a monitoring system. |
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