Attention network functioning in children with anxiety disorders, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder and non-clinical anxiety
Attention network functioning in children with anxiety disorders, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder and non-clinical anxiety
Research with adults suggests that anxiety is associated with poor control of executive attention. However, in children, it is unclear (a) whether anxiety disorders and non-clinical anxiety are associated with deficits in executive attention, (b) whether such deficits are specific to anxiety versus other psychiatric disorders, and (c) whether there is heterogeneity among anxiety disorders (in particular, specific phobia versus other anxiety disorders).
We examined executive attention in 860 children classified into three groups: anxiety disorders (n = 67), attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD; n = 67) and no psychiatric disorder (n = 726). Anxiety disorders were subdivided into: anxiety disorders excluding specific phobia (n = 43) and specific phobia (n = 21). The Attention Network Task was used to assess executive attention, alerting and orienting. Findings indicated heterogeneity among anxiety disorders, as children with anxiety disorders (excluding specific phobia) showed impaired executive attention, compared with disorder-free children, whereas children with specific phobia showed no executive attention deficit. Among disorder-free children, executive attention was less efficient in those with high, relative to low, levels of anxiety. There were no anxiety-related deficits in orienting or alerting. Children with ADHD not only had poorer executive attention than disorder-free children, but also higher orienting scores, less accurate responses and more variable response times.
Impaired executive attention in children (reflected by difficulty inhibiting processing of task-irrelevant information) was not fully explained by general psychopathology, but instead showed specific associations with anxiety disorders (other than specific phobia) and ADHD, as well as with high levels of anxiety symptoms in disorder-free children.
2633-2646
Mogg, K.
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Salum, G.A.
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Bradley, B.P.
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Gadelha, A.
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Pan, P.
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Alvarenga, P.
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Rohde, L.A.
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Pine, D.S.
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Manfro, G.G.
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1 September 2015
Mogg, K.
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Salum, G.A.
0f583594-247d-4b0d-b646-0bdac597c60d
Bradley, B.P.
bdacaa6c-528b-4086-9448-27ebfe463514
Gadelha, A.
5c43d356-b83e-4edd-8d8d-21ba936cbcde
Pan, P.
cb5c4114-9ff6-4cea-b06f-0a4bda452b69
Alvarenga, P.
cbf7bf48-1161-4186-9e91-e44b405a3516
Rohde, L.A.
a462c9af-c86b-40f3-ae46-e22c388adb32
Pine, D.S.
debffc1c-1efc-4bcf-81b3-87aadee1047d
Manfro, G.G.
e1d72248-ebc3-491c-af23-d29c1a049e0f
Mogg, K., Salum, G.A., Bradley, B.P., Gadelha, A., Pan, P., Alvarenga, P., Rohde, L.A., Pine, D.S. and Manfro, G.G.
(2015)
Attention network functioning in children with anxiety disorders, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder and non-clinical anxiety.
Psychological Medicine, 45 (12), .
(doi:10.1017/S0033291715000586).
Abstract
Research with adults suggests that anxiety is associated with poor control of executive attention. However, in children, it is unclear (a) whether anxiety disorders and non-clinical anxiety are associated with deficits in executive attention, (b) whether such deficits are specific to anxiety versus other psychiatric disorders, and (c) whether there is heterogeneity among anxiety disorders (in particular, specific phobia versus other anxiety disorders).
We examined executive attention in 860 children classified into three groups: anxiety disorders (n = 67), attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD; n = 67) and no psychiatric disorder (n = 726). Anxiety disorders were subdivided into: anxiety disorders excluding specific phobia (n = 43) and specific phobia (n = 21). The Attention Network Task was used to assess executive attention, alerting and orienting. Findings indicated heterogeneity among anxiety disorders, as children with anxiety disorders (excluding specific phobia) showed impaired executive attention, compared with disorder-free children, whereas children with specific phobia showed no executive attention deficit. Among disorder-free children, executive attention was less efficient in those with high, relative to low, levels of anxiety. There were no anxiety-related deficits in orienting or alerting. Children with ADHD not only had poorer executive attention than disorder-free children, but also higher orienting scores, less accurate responses and more variable response times.
Impaired executive attention in children (reflected by difficulty inhibiting processing of task-irrelevant information) was not fully explained by general psychopathology, but instead showed specific associations with anxiety disorders (other than specific phobia) and ADHD, as well as with high levels of anxiety symptoms in disorder-free children.
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Accepted/In Press date: 10 March 2015
e-pub ahead of print date: 24 April 2015
Published date: 1 September 2015
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Local EPrints ID: 415942
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/415942
ISSN: 0033-2917
PURE UUID: d87bf9b8-76bd-42e8-b41b-01bc9e26a5ec
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Date deposited: 29 Nov 2017 17:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:19
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Author:
G.A. Salum
Author:
A. Gadelha
Author:
P. Pan
Author:
P. Alvarenga
Author:
L.A. Rohde
Author:
D.S. Pine
Author:
G.G. Manfro
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