Title of article
Action Monitoring in Boys With Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder, Their Nonaffected Siblings, and Normal Control Subjects: Evidence for an Endophenotype
Author/Authors
Bjoern Albrecht، نويسنده , , Daniel Brandeis، نويسنده , , Henrik Uebel، نويسنده , , Hartmut Heinrich، نويسنده , , Ueli C. Mueller، نويسنده , , Marcus Hasselhorn، نويسنده , , Hans-Christoph Steinhausen، نويسنده , , Aribert Rothenberger، نويسنده , , Tobias Banaschewski، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages
11
From page
615
To page
625
Abstract
Background
Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a very common and highly heritable child psychiatric disorder associated with dysfunctions in fronto-striatal networks that control attention and response organization. The aim of this study was to investigate whether features of action monitoring related to dopaminergic functions represent endophenotypes that are brain functions on the pathway from genes and environmental risk factors to behavior.
Methods
Action monitoring and error processing as indicated by behavioral and electrophysiological parameters during a flanker task were examined in boys with ADHD combined type according to DSM-IV (n = 68), their nonaffected siblings (n = 18), and healthy control subjects with no known family history of ADHD (n = 22).
Results
Boys with ADHD displayed slower and more variable reaction-times. Error negativity (Ne) was smaller in boys with ADHD compared with healthy control subjects, whereas nonaffected siblings displayed intermediate amplitudes following a linear model predicted by genetic concordance. The three groups did not differ on error positivity (Pe). The N2 amplitude enhancement due to conflict (incongruent flankers) was reduced in the ADHD group. Nonaffected siblings also displayed intermediate N2 enhancement.
Conclusions
Converging evidence from behavioral and event-related potential findings suggests that action monitoring and initial error processing, both related to dopaminergically modulated functions of anterior cingulate cortex, might be an endophenotype related to ADHD.
Keywords
ADHD , Endophenotype , error positivity , N2 , Error negativity , Action monitoring
Journal title
Biological Psychiatry
Serial Year
2008
Journal title
Biological Psychiatry
Record number
503813
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