Abstract

Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) patients have both working memory (WM) and attention problems. Good attention skills are important for WM performance; individuals have higher WM capacity when being able to prevent storage of irrelevant information through efficient filtering. Since it is unknown how filtering ability is associated with WM performance in ADHD, this was investigated in the present study. A visuospatial working memory (VSWM) change detection task with distracting stimuli was administered to adolescents (12–16 years old) and adults (20–46 years old) with and without ADHD matched on education/IQ. Besides performance, contralateral delay activity (CDA) was measured; a neural correlate of the number of targets and distracters encoded and maintained in WM during the retention interval. Performance data showed similar WM-load, WM-distracter interference and developmental effects in ADHD and control groups. Adolescents’ performance on the WM task deteriorated more than that of adults in the presence of distracters and with higher WM-load, irrespective of Diagnosis. The CDA data suggested that initially all groups encoded/maintained distracting information, but only adults were able to bounce this information from memory later in the retention interval, leading to better WM performance. The only effect of Diagnosis was a smaller CDA in adolescents and adults with ADHD than in age/IQ-matched controls when maintaining a low 1-item load, which was possibly related to an inability to keep attention focused at cued stimuli with low task demands. Overall, the development of filtering efficiency and VSWM storage capacity in adolescents with ADHD was not different from that in typically developing peers.

Highlights

  • Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a developmental disorder with a high prevalence of 6–9% in children [1], and is characterized by symptoms of inattention, impulsivity and hyperactivity (DSM-IV-TR) [2]

  • Backward and standardized digit spans were collected for all groups to obtain measures of verbal working memory (WM) span, and visuospatial WM span was measured by computing K in T1D0, T1D2 and T3D0 conditions of the visuospatial working memory (VSWM) task

  • The present study investigated the development of visuospatial working memory (VSWM) capacity and its relations with filtering efficiency during adolescence in ADHD

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Summary

Introduction

Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a developmental disorder with a high prevalence of 6–9% in children [1], and is characterized by symptoms of inattention, impulsivity and hyperactivity (DSM-IV-TR) [2]. Impaired performance on neuropsychological memory tasks has been reported in children [6,7], adolescents [8,9] and adults [10,11,12] with ADHD and does not seem to resolve with age. Two meta-analysis studies reported deficits with large effect sizes in visuospatial short-term memory (VSSTM) or working memory (VSWM) in children, adolescents and adults with ADHD [13,14]. Impairments in verbal STM and WM were reported in ADHD but with smaller effect sizes than visuospatial deficits [13]

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