Abstract

BackgroundMost research on motivational processes in attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) has been undertaken in Western Europe and North America. The extent to which these findings apply to other cultural groups is unclear. The current study evaluated the behavioral sensitivity of Japanese children with and without ADHD to changing reward availability. Forty-one school-aged children, 19 diagnosed with DSM-IV ADHD, completed a signal-detection task in which correct discriminations between two stimuli were associated with different reinforcement frequencies. The response alternative associated with the higher rate of reinforcement switched twice during the task without warning.FindingsBoth groups of children developed an initial bias toward the more frequently reinforced response alternative. When the reward contingencies switched the response allocation (bias) of the control group children followed suit. The response bias scores of the children with ADHD did not, suggesting impaired tracking of reward availability over time.ConclusionsJapanese children with ADHD adjust their behavioral responses to changing reinforcer availability less than their typically developing peers. This is not explained by poor attention to task or a lack of sensitivity to reward. The current results are consistent with altered sensitivity to changing reward contingencies identified in non-Japanese samples of children with ADHD. Irrespective of their country of origin, children with ADHD will likely benefit from behavioral expectations and reinforcement contingencies being made explicit together with high rates of reinforcement for appropriate behaviors.

Highlights

  • Most research on motivational processes in attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) has been undertaken in Western Europe and North America

  • Japanese children with ADHD adjust their behavioral responses to changing reinforcer availability less than their typically developing peers

  • The current results are consistent with altered sensitivity to changing reward contingencies identified in non-Japanese samples of children with ADHD

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Summary

Introduction

Most research on motivational processes in attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) has been undertaken in Western Europe and North America. Forty-one school-aged children, 19 diagnosed with DSM-IV ADHD, completed a signaldetection task in which correct discriminations between two stimuli were associated with different reinforcement frequencies. Furukawa et al Behav Brain Funct (2017) 13:13 level the most consistent finding is that children with ADHD are more likely to choose small immediate over larger delayed rewards compared with typically developing children (see [15] for a review). A number of studies report the performance enhancing effects of reward, on a range of cognitive tasks, are larger in children with ADHD than controls (see [16, 17] for reviews). Results from some studies suggest the performance of children with ADHD is more similar to that of controls when reinforcement for correct responses is continuous or near continuous (e.g., [12, 18,19,20,21,22])

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