Hyperactivity in children: a focus on genetic research and psychological theories
Hyperactivity in children: a focus on genetic research and psychological theories
Hyperactivity has attracted a large amount of research interest in recent years. Here we review developments in genetic research and in research testing psychological theories of the condition. Family, adoptee and twin studies indicate a strong role for genetic factors in the etiology of hyperactivity. Evidence is emerging also from molecular genetic studies, implicating specific genes that may be involved. At the level of cognitive functioning, a divided, focused or sustained attention deficit does not seem to be a core deficit in hyperactivity. Although children with hyperactivity often perform poorly on certain executive function tasks, there is disagreement about the interpretation of these findings. The association reported in some studies between a slow inhibitory process and hyperactivity may reflect a generally slow, variable in speed and inaccurate pattern of responding. Hypotheses about psychological mechanisms such as state regulation or delay aversion provide alternative, and particularly encouraging, interpretations of the findings. We discuss the possible integration of the two lines of research—those of genetic research and research on psychological mechanisms.
adhd, hyperactivity, genetics, response inhibition, delay aversion, state regulation
1-23
Kuntsi, Jonna
e69aa34b-8956-4ec9-b815-2bb3032854e1
Stevenson, Jim
0c85d29b-d294-43cb-ab8d-75e4737478e1
2000
Kuntsi, Jonna
e69aa34b-8956-4ec9-b815-2bb3032854e1
Stevenson, Jim
0c85d29b-d294-43cb-ab8d-75e4737478e1
Kuntsi, Jonna and Stevenson, Jim
(2000)
Hyperactivity in children: a focus on genetic research and psychological theories.
Clinical Child and Family Psychology Review, 3 (1), .
(doi:10.1023/A:1009580718281).
Abstract
Hyperactivity has attracted a large amount of research interest in recent years. Here we review developments in genetic research and in research testing psychological theories of the condition. Family, adoptee and twin studies indicate a strong role for genetic factors in the etiology of hyperactivity. Evidence is emerging also from molecular genetic studies, implicating specific genes that may be involved. At the level of cognitive functioning, a divided, focused or sustained attention deficit does not seem to be a core deficit in hyperactivity. Although children with hyperactivity often perform poorly on certain executive function tasks, there is disagreement about the interpretation of these findings. The association reported in some studies between a slow inhibitory process and hyperactivity may reflect a generally slow, variable in speed and inaccurate pattern of responding. Hypotheses about psychological mechanisms such as state regulation or delay aversion provide alternative, and particularly encouraging, interpretations of the findings. We discuss the possible integration of the two lines of research—those of genetic research and research on psychological mechanisms.
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Published date: 2000
Keywords:
adhd, hyperactivity, genetics, response inhibition, delay aversion, state regulation
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Local EPrints ID: 18377
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/18377
ISSN: 1096-4037
PURE UUID: 68a56545-9b8f-4be0-a079-1123339e3f23
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Date deposited: 06 Jan 2006
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 06:04
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Author:
Jonna Kuntsi
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