Title of article
Selective Inhibition in Children With Attention-Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder off and on Stimulant Medication
Author/Authors
Anne-Claude Bedard، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Pages
13
From page
315
To page
327
Abstract
Selective inhibition requires discrimination between auditory signals and is assessed using a modification
of the stop-signal task. Selective inhibition was assessed in a group of 59 clinic-referred,
DSM-IV-diagnosed children with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and compared to
that of a community sample of 59 children. Methylphenidate (MPH) effects on selective inhibition
were assessed in a subset of the ADHD sample that participated in an acute, randomized, placebocontrolled,
crossover trial with 3 fixed doses of MPH. Children with ADHD performed more poorly
than controls on the majority of selective stop-signal task parameters: they exhibited more anticipatory
(invalid) responses, with less accurate and more variable responses on the response execution task, as
well as a slower selective inhibition process. MPH improved speed of both inhibition and response
execution processes; it also reduced variability of response execution and decreased nonselective
inhibition. On the one hand, findings are consistent with purported inhibition deficit in ADHD, but
on the other hand, suggest that neither the impairment itself, nor MPH effects, were restricted to
inhibition
Keywords
selective inhibition , Methylphenidate , cognitiveimpairment , childhood psychopathology. , Attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder
Journal title
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology
Serial Year
2003
Journal title
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology
Record number
828695
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