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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Using the Diffusion Model to Explain Cognitive Deficits in Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder.

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TLDR
It was found that fast event rates slowed the rate at which children with ADHD accumulated evidence to make a decision to “no-go”, as indexed by drift rate, which resulted in a higher proportion of failed inhibits and occurred despite increased task engagement.
Abstract
Slow, variable, and error-prone performance on speeded reaction time (RT) tasks has been well documented in childhood ADHD, but equally well documented is the context-dependent nature of those deficits, particularly with respect to event rate. As event rates increase (or, as the interstimulus intervals become shorter), RTs decrease, a pattern of performance that has long been interpreted as evidence that cognitive deficits in ADHD are a downstream consequence of a fundamental difficulty in the regulation of arousal to meet task demands. We test the extent to which this is a misinterpretation of the data that occurs when RT and accuracy are considered separately, as is common in neurocognitive research. In two samples of children aged 8–10 with (N = 97; 33 girls) and without (N = 39; 26 girls) ADHD, we used the diffusion model, an influential computational model of RT, to examine the effect of event rate on inhibitory control in a go-no-go task. Contrary to longstanding belief, we found that fast event rates slowed the rate at which children with ADHD accumulated evidence to make a decision to “no-go”, as indexed by drift rate. This in turn resulted in a higher proportion of failed inhibits, and occurred despite increased task engagement, as reflected by changes in the starting point of the decision process. Thus, although faster event rates increased task engagement among children with ADHD, the increased engagement was unable to counteract the concurrent slowing of processing speed to “no-go” decisions. Implications for theoretical models of ADHD and treatments are discussed.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Modelling ADHD: A review of ADHD theories through their predictions for computational models of decision-making and reinforcement learning.

TL;DR: Predictions for the effect of ADHD on DM and RL as described by the drift-diffusion model of DM (DDM) and a basic RL model are described and research areas for further theoretical refinement in the ADHD field are outlined.
Journal ArticleDOI

ADHD: Current Concepts and Treatments in Children and Adolescents

TL;DR: The diagnosis and treatment of ADHD are still challenging for clinicians, necessitating increased reliance on their expertise and experience, and an overview of current neurobiological concepts of ADHD is given.
Journal ArticleDOI

Is Poor Working Memory a Transdiagnostic Risk Factor for Psychopathology

TL;DR: The results suggest that working memory deficits represent both a common cognitive liability for mental health disorders, and a specific liability for externalizing disorders.
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The role of speed in ADHD-related working memory deficits: A time-based resource-sharing and diffusion model account.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated in school-aged children with and without ADHD that manipulating speed within a WM paradigm reduces WM capacity due to an increase in cognitive load, in a manner that is consistent with predictions of the time-based resource-sharing model of WM.
Journal ArticleDOI

Modeling Individual Differences in the Go/No-go Task with a Diffusion Model.

TL;DR: Results show that a diffusion model with an implicit (no response) boundary can be fit to data with almost the same accuracy as fitting the two-choice model to two- choice data.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Behavioral inhibition, sustained attention, and executive functions: Constructing a unifying theory of ADHD.

TL;DR: A theoretical model that links inhibition to 4 executive neuropsychological functions that appear to depend on it for their effective execution is constructed and finds it to be strongest for deficits in behavioral inhibition, working memory, regulation of motivation, and motor control in those with ADHD.
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Self-regulation and depletion of limited resources: does self-control resemble a muscle?

TL;DR: The authors review evidence that self-control may consume a limited resource and conclude that the executive component of the self--in particular, inhibition--relies on a limited, consumable resource.
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NIMH Diagnostic Interview Schedule for Children Version IV (NIMH DISC-IV): Description, Differences From Previous Versions, and Reliability of Some Common Diagnoses

TL;DR: The NIMH DISC-IV is an acceptable, inexpensive, and convenient instrument for ascertaining a comprehensive range of child and adolescent diagnoses.
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Validity of the executive function theory of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder: a meta-analytic review.

TL;DR: Difficulties with EF appear to be one important component of the complex neuropsychology of ADHD, and moderate effect sizes and lack of universality of EF deficits among individuals with ADHD suggest that EF weaknesses are neither necessary nor sufficient to cause all cases of ADHD.
Journal ArticleDOI

On the Ability to Inhibit Thought and Action: A Theory of an Act of Control

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a theory of the inhibition of thought and action to account for people's performance in situations with explicit stop signals, and apply it to several sets of data.
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