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Do executive deficits and delay aversion make independent contributions to preschool attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder symptoms?

Do executive deficits and delay aversion make independent contributions to preschool attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder symptoms?
Do executive deficits and delay aversion make independent contributions to preschool attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder symptoms?
Objective: To test whether deficits in executive function and delay aversion make independent contributions to levels of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) symptoms exhibited by preschool children.
Method: One hundred fifty-six children between 3 and 5.5 years old (78 girls and 78 boys) selected from the community completed an age-appropriate battery of tests measuring working memory, set shifting, planning, delay of gratification, and preference for delayed rewards. Parents completed a clinical interview about their children's ADHD symptoms.
Results: Analysis of test performance revealed two factors: executive dysfunction and delay aversion. Multivariate analysis demonstrated that when other factors (i.e., age, IQ, and conduct problems) were controlled, executive dysfunction and delay aversion each made significant independent contributions to predictions of ADHD symptoms.
Conclusions: Preschool ADHD symptoms are psychologically heterogeneous. Executive dysfunction and delay aversion may represent two distinct and early appearing neurodevelopmental bases for ADHD symptoms.
0890-8567
1335-1342
Sonuga-Barke, Edmund J.S.
bc80bf95-6cf9-4c76-a09d-eaaf0b717635
Dalen, Lindy
9237d3d2-c752-4821-bf12-7ec92effd931
Remington, Bob
87f75b79-4207-4b3a-8ad0-a8e4b26c010f
Sonuga-Barke, Edmund J.S.
bc80bf95-6cf9-4c76-a09d-eaaf0b717635
Dalen, Lindy
9237d3d2-c752-4821-bf12-7ec92effd931
Remington, Bob
87f75b79-4207-4b3a-8ad0-a8e4b26c010f

Sonuga-Barke, Edmund J.S., Dalen, Lindy and Remington, Bob (2003) Do executive deficits and delay aversion make independent contributions to preschool attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder symptoms? Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, 42 (11), 1335-1342. (doi:10.1097/01.chi.0000087564.34977.21).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective: To test whether deficits in executive function and delay aversion make independent contributions to levels of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) symptoms exhibited by preschool children.
Method: One hundred fifty-six children between 3 and 5.5 years old (78 girls and 78 boys) selected from the community completed an age-appropriate battery of tests measuring working memory, set shifting, planning, delay of gratification, and preference for delayed rewards. Parents completed a clinical interview about their children's ADHD symptoms.
Results: Analysis of test performance revealed two factors: executive dysfunction and delay aversion. Multivariate analysis demonstrated that when other factors (i.e., age, IQ, and conduct problems) were controlled, executive dysfunction and delay aversion each made significant independent contributions to predictions of ADHD symptoms.
Conclusions: Preschool ADHD symptoms are psychologically heterogeneous. Executive dysfunction and delay aversion may represent two distinct and early appearing neurodevelopmental bases for ADHD symptoms.

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Published date: 2003
Organisations: Clinical Neurosciences, Human Wellbeing

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Local EPrints ID: 18287
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/18287
ISSN: 0890-8567
PURE UUID: 1bab0c68-b38d-4810-aa5c-a980cdf3915c

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Date deposited: 18 Jan 2006
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 06:04

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Contributors

Author: Edmund J.S. Sonuga-Barke
Author: Lindy Dalen
Author: Bob Remington

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