1. Identifying a distinctive familial frequency band in reaction time fluctuations in ADHD
- Author
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Suzannah K. Helps, Paraskevi Bitsakou, Edmund J.S. Sonuga-Barke, and Samantha J. Broyd
- Subjects
Male ,Proband ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,DEFICIT HYPERACTIVITY DISORDER ,Brain activity and meditation ,Frequency band ,INHIBITION ,Social Sciences ,BRAIN ACTIVITY ,attentional lapses ,CHILDREN ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Audiology ,Developmental psychology ,Reaction Time ,medicine ,Humans ,INTRA-SUBJECT VARIABILITY ,Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder ,Child ,Frequency noise ,Default mode network ,Family Health ,Memory Disorders ,DELAY AVERSION ,ATTENTION-DEFICIT/HYPERACTIVITY DISORDER ,Recognition, Psychology ,medicine.disease ,Frequency spectrum ,endophenotype ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,reaction time variability ,INTRAINDIVIDUAL VARIABILITY ,Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity ,Endophenotype ,DEFAULT-MODE ,RESPONSE VARIABILITY ,Female ,low frequency ,Psychology - Abstract
Objective: Patients with ADHD are typically more variable in their reaction times (RT) than control children. Signal processing analyses have shown that time series RT data of children with ADHD have a distinctive low frequency periodic structure suggestive of a pattern of occasional spontaneous performance lapses. Here we use a fine-grained analysis of spectral power across a broader frequency range to differentiate the periodic qualities of ADHD time series RT data from (a) 1/frequency noise, and (b) control performance. We also assess the familiality of these frequencies by using a proband-sibling design. Method: Seventy-one children with ADHD, one of their siblings, and 50 control participants completed a simple RT task. Power across the RT frequency spectrum was calculated. The frequencies significantly differentiating the two groups were identified. Familiality was assessed in two ways: first, by comparing probands with their unaffected siblings and controls, and, second, by investigating the siblings of neuropsychologically impaired and unimpaired children with ADHD. Results: Analyses converged to highlight the potential importance of the .20–.26 Hz band in differentiating the periodic structure of ADHD RT time series data from both 1/frequency noise and control performance. This frequency band also showed the strongest evidence of familiality. Conclusions: RT performance of children with ADHD had a distinctive periodic structure. The band identified as most differentiating and familial was at a higher frequency than in most previous reports. This highlights the importance of employing tasks with faster interstimulus intervals that will allow a larger portion of the frequency spectrum to be examined. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2011 APA, all rights reserved)
- Published
- 2011
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