scholarly journals Effects of methylphenidate on complex cognitive processing in attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder.

1999 ◽  
Vol 108 (1) ◽  
pp. 90-105 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tamara Berman ◽  
Virginia I. Douglas ◽  
Ronald G. Barr
2017 ◽  
Vol 15 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Yoana Campeño Martínez ◽  
José Jesús Gázquez Linares ◽  
Víctor Santiuste Bermejo

El trastorno por déficit de atención con hiperactividad (TDAH) es un trastorno complejo de origen neurobiológico, caracterizado tanto por sus implicaciones cognitivas como por su afectación a la base afectiva y emocional del procesamiento cognitivo. En esta investigación se han analizado las diferencias en el procesamiento cognitivo del contenido emocional, con la finalidad de evaluar las dificultades que presentan las personas con TDAH en dichas tareas, a través de la medición del contenido emocional de las palabras de una prueba de decisión léxica The attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a complex neurobiological disorder origin, characterized both its cognitive implications of their involvement as the basis of affective and cognitive emotional processing. This research has analyzed the differences in cognitive processing of emotional content, with the aim of assessing the difficulties presented by persons with ADHD in these tasks, by measuring the emotional content of the words of a test lexical decision


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jonah Kember ◽  
Carolynn Hare ◽  
Ayda Tekok-Kilic ◽  
William Marshall ◽  
Stephen M. Emrich ◽  
...  

The heterogeneity of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) traits (inattention vs. hyperactivity/impulsivity) complicates diagnosis and intervention. Identifying how the configuration of large-scale functional brain networks during cognitive processing correlate with this heterogeneity could help us understand the neural mechanisms altered across ADHD presentations. Here, we recorded high-density EEG while 62 non-clinical participants (ages 18-24; 32 male) underwent an inhibitory control task (Go/No-Go). Functional EEG networks were created using sensors as nodes and across-trial phase-lag index values as edges. Using cross-validated LASSO regression, we examined whether graph-theory metrics applied to both static networks (averaged across time-windows: -500 to 0ms, 0 to500ms) and dynamic networks (temporally layered with 2ms intervals), were associated with hyperactive/impulsive and inattentive traits. Network configuration during response execution/inhibition was associated with hyperactive/impulsive (mean R2 across test sets = .20, SE = .02), but not inattentive traits. Post-stimulus results at higher frequencies (Beta, 14-29Hz; Gamma, 30-90Hz) showed the strongest association with hyperactive/impulsive traits, and predominantly reflected less burst-like integration between modules in oscillatory beta networks during execution, and increased integration/small-worldness in oscillatory gamma networks during inhibition. We interpret the beta network results as reflecting weaker integration between specialized pre-frontal and motor systems during motor response preparation, and the gamma results as reflecting a compensatory mechanism used to integrate processing between less functionally specialized networks. This research demonstrates that the neural network mechanisms underlying response execution/inhibition might be associated with hyperactive/impulsive traits, and that dynamic, task-related changes in EEG functional networks may be useful in disentangling ADHD heterogeneity.


2019 ◽  
Vol 51 (3) ◽  
pp. 167-173
Author(s):  
Christie Picken ◽  
Adam R. Clarke ◽  
Robert J. Barry ◽  
Rory McCarthy ◽  
Mark Selikowitz

An elevated theta/beta ratio in the EEG has long been observed among individuals with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD). The theta/beta ratio was previously hypothesised to be an index of arousal, but a number of studies failed to find any association between the ratio and indices of arousal, instead proposing that the theta/beta ratio may actually be indicative of cognitive processing. This hypothesis was tested by Clarke et al using a sample of healthy adults, with results indicating that the theta/beta ratio correlated with a marker of cognitive processing (P300 latency in an auditory oddball task), while P300 amplitude correlated with an arousal marker (alpha power). The aim of this study was to test whether similar results could be found in a sample of 41 adults with the combined type of ADHD. EEGs were recorded during an eyes-closed resting condition and an auditory oddball task. Results demonstrated that the theta/beta ratio correlated significantly with P300 latency. Absolute alpha power did not correlate significantly with P300 amplitude or P300 latency. These results support the hypotheses that the theta/beta ratio is a marker of cognitive processing capacity in both the general population and in participants with ADHD, and that the alpha/arousal linkage is anomalous in ADHD.


2003 ◽  
Vol 32 (2) ◽  
pp. 241-262 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lisa Marie Angello ◽  
Robert J. Volpe ◽  
James C. DiPerna ◽  
Sammi P. Gureasko-Moore ◽  
David P. Gureasko-Moore ◽  
...  

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