Aspects of ADHD in adults neurocognitive functioning, actigraphy, effects of methylphenidate, and association with genetic polymorphisms /
Abstract (Summary)
Background: Several theoretical explanations of ADHD in children have focused on
executive functioning as the main explanatory neuro-psychological domain for the
disorder. In order to establish if these theoretical accounts are supported by
research data for adults with ADHD, we compared neuropsychological executive
functioning and non-executive functioning between adults with ADHD and normal
controls in a meta-analytic design.
Method: We compared thirteen studies that 1) included at least one executive
functioning measure, 2) compared the performance of an adult ADHD group with
that of an adult normal control group, 3) provided sufficient information for
calculation of effect sizes, and 4) used DSM-III-R or DSM-IV criteria to diagnose
ADHD.
Results: We found medium effect sizes both in executive functioning areas [verbal
fluency (d=.62), inhibition (d=.64 and d=.89), and set shifting (d=.65)] and in nonexecutive
functioning domains [consistency of response (d=.57), word reading
(d=.60) and color naming (d=.62)].
Conclusions: Neuropsychological difficulties in adult ADHD may not be confined to
executive functioning. The field is in urgent need of better-designed executive
functioning tests, methodological improvements, and direct comparisons with
multiple clinical groups to answer questions of specificity.
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Source Type:Master's Thesis
Keywords:aandachtstekortstoornis met hyperactiviteit volwassenen
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