Affiliation:
1. Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, USA
2. Peking University, Beijing, China
3. National Clinical Research Center for Mental Disorders (Peking University Sixth Hospital), Beijing, China
Abstract
Objective: Verbal fluency, the capacity to generate words from a designated category, predicts myriad cognitive and life outcomes. The study investigated verbal fluency in children with ADHD, autism spectrum disorder (ASD), and comorbid ADHD and ASD, to understand how ADHD- and ASD-related symptoms individually and jointly predict verbal fluency, and the underlying linguistic and cognitive substrates. Method: Thirty-three school-aged children with ADHD, 27 with ASD, 25 with comorbid ADHD and ASD, and 39 with typical development, were assessed for ADHD and ASD symptoms and completed a semantic verbal fluency task. Results: Findings indicated that ADHD and ASD symptoms, especially ADHD hyperactivity-impulsivity symptoms and language-related ASD symptoms, interactively predicted verbal fluency across diagnostic groups. Conclusion: The study implicated the potential cognitive and linguistic mechanisms underlying verbal fluency differences in ADHD and/or ASD, and clinical practices on enhancing verbal fluency in these clinical groups.
Funder
national natural science foundation of china
special project for research and development in key areas of guangdong province
national key research and development program of china
fundamental research funds for the central universities
Beijing Municipal Science and Technology Commission
Clinical Medicine Plus X - Young Scholars Project
peking university