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Evidence for an Error Monitoring Deficit in Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder
Authors:Russell J. Schachar  Shirley Chen  Gordon D. Logan  Tisha J. Ornstein  Jennifer Crosbie  Abel Ickowicz  Amber Pakulak
Affiliation:Brain and Behavior Program, Research Institute, and Department of Psychiatry, University of Toronto, The Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Canada. russell.schachar@sickkids.ca
Abstract:We studied error monitoring in ADHD and control children in a task requiring inhibition of a motor response. The extent of slowing following successful (stopped) and failed (nonstopped) inhibition was compared across groups. We also measured the time required to inhibit a response (stop signal reaction time, SSRT). Compared to controls, ADHD participants slowed less following nonstopped responses. Slowing did not vary with comorbid reading, oppositional, conduct or anxiety disorder, sex or ADHD subtype. Slowing after nonstopped responses was marginally, although significantly correlated with total ADHD symptoms and with age. ADHD participants had significantly longer SSRT than controls, but SSRT was not significantly correlated with slowing. The apparent deficit in error monitoring in ADHD and its independence from the inhibition deficit observed in ADHD has implications for executive control models of ADHD, performance problems associated with the disorder and for component theories of executive control.
Keywords:error monitoring  ADHD  inhibition  cognition
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