Author:
ANDREOU PENNY,NEALE BEN M.,CHEN WAI,CHRISTIANSEN HANNA,GABRIELS ISABEL,HEISE ALEXANDER,MEIDAD SHEERA,MULLER UELI C.,UEBEL HENRIK,BANASCHEWSKI TOBIAS,MANOR IRIS,OADES ROBERT,ROEYERS HERBERT,ROTHENBERGER ARIBERT,SHAM PAK,STEINHAUSEN HANS-CHRISTOPH,ASHERSON PHILIP,KUNTSI JONNA
Abstract
ABSTRACTBackgroundReaction time (RT) variability is one of the strongest findings to emerge in cognitive-experimental research of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). We set out to confirm the association between ADHD and slow and variable RTs and investigate the degree to which RT performance improves under fast event rate and incentives. Using a group familial correlation approach, we tested the hypothesis that there are shared familial effects on RT performance and ADHD.MethodA total of 144 ADHD combined-type probands, 125 siblings of the ADHD probands and 60 control participants, ages 6–18, performed a four-choice RT task with baseline and fast-incentive conditions.ResultsADHD was associated with slow and variable RTs, and with greater improvement in speed and RT variability from baseline to fast-incentive condition. RT performance showed shared familial influences with ADHD. Under the assumption that the familial effects represent genetic influences, the proportion of the phenotypic correlation due to shared familial influences was estimated as 60–70%.ConclusionsThe data are inconsistent with models that consider RT variability as reflecting a stable cognitive deficit in ADHD, but instead emphasize the extent to which energetic or motivational factors can have a greater effect on RT performance in ADHD. The findings support the role of RT variability as an endophenotype mediating the link between genes and ADHD.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Applied Psychology
Cited by
140 articles.
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