Deficits in cognitive control, timing and reward sensitivity appear to be dissociable in ADHD.

Recent neurobiological models of ADHD suggest that deficits in different neurobiological pathways may independently lead to symptoms of this disorder. At least three independent pathways may be involved: a dorsal frontostriatal pathway involved in cognitive control, a ventral frontostriatal pathway...

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Main Authors: Patrick de Zeeuw, Juliette Weusten, Sarai van Dijk, Janna van Belle, Sarah Durston
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3517570?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-69daf43174e441fe8e1eb4801dd3ec0f2020-11-25T00:11:15ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032012-01-01712e5141610.1371/journal.pone.0051416Deficits in cognitive control, timing and reward sensitivity appear to be dissociable in ADHD.Patrick de ZeeuwJuliette WeustenSarai van DijkJanna van BelleSarah DurstonRecent neurobiological models of ADHD suggest that deficits in different neurobiological pathways may independently lead to symptoms of this disorder. At least three independent pathways may be involved: a dorsal frontostriatal pathway involved in cognitive control, a ventral frontostriatal pathway involved in reward processing and a frontocerebellar pathway related to temporal processing. Importantly, we and others have suggested that disruptions in these three pathways should lead to separable deficits at the cognitive level. Furthermore, if these truly represent separate biological pathways to ADHD, these cognitive deficits should segregate between individuals with ADHD. The present study tests these hypotheses in a sample of children, adolescents and young adults with ADHD and controls. 149 Subjects participated in a short computerized battery assessing cognitive control, timing and reward sensitivity. We used Principal Component Analysis to find independent components underlying the variance in the data. The segregation of deficits between individuals was tested using Loglinear Analysis. We found four components, three of which were predicted by the model: Cognitive control, reward sensitivity and timing. Furthermore, 80% of subjects with ADHD that had a deficit were deficient on only one component. Loglinear Analysis statistically confirmed the independent segregation of deficits between individuals. We therefore conclude that cognitive control, timing and reward sensitivity were separable at a cognitive level and that deficits on these components segregated between individuals with ADHD. These results support a neurobiological framework of separate biological pathways to ADHD with separable cognitive deficits.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3517570?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Patrick de Zeeuw
Juliette Weusten
Sarai van Dijk
Janna van Belle
Sarah Durston
spellingShingle Patrick de Zeeuw
Juliette Weusten
Sarai van Dijk
Janna van Belle
Sarah Durston
Deficits in cognitive control, timing and reward sensitivity appear to be dissociable in ADHD.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Patrick de Zeeuw
Juliette Weusten
Sarai van Dijk
Janna van Belle
Sarah Durston
author_sort Patrick de Zeeuw
title Deficits in cognitive control, timing and reward sensitivity appear to be dissociable in ADHD.
title_short Deficits in cognitive control, timing and reward sensitivity appear to be dissociable in ADHD.
title_full Deficits in cognitive control, timing and reward sensitivity appear to be dissociable in ADHD.
title_fullStr Deficits in cognitive control, timing and reward sensitivity appear to be dissociable in ADHD.
title_full_unstemmed Deficits in cognitive control, timing and reward sensitivity appear to be dissociable in ADHD.
title_sort deficits in cognitive control, timing and reward sensitivity appear to be dissociable in adhd.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2012-01-01
description Recent neurobiological models of ADHD suggest that deficits in different neurobiological pathways may independently lead to symptoms of this disorder. At least three independent pathways may be involved: a dorsal frontostriatal pathway involved in cognitive control, a ventral frontostriatal pathway involved in reward processing and a frontocerebellar pathway related to temporal processing. Importantly, we and others have suggested that disruptions in these three pathways should lead to separable deficits at the cognitive level. Furthermore, if these truly represent separate biological pathways to ADHD, these cognitive deficits should segregate between individuals with ADHD. The present study tests these hypotheses in a sample of children, adolescents and young adults with ADHD and controls. 149 Subjects participated in a short computerized battery assessing cognitive control, timing and reward sensitivity. We used Principal Component Analysis to find independent components underlying the variance in the data. The segregation of deficits between individuals was tested using Loglinear Analysis. We found four components, three of which were predicted by the model: Cognitive control, reward sensitivity and timing. Furthermore, 80% of subjects with ADHD that had a deficit were deficient on only one component. Loglinear Analysis statistically confirmed the independent segregation of deficits between individuals. We therefore conclude that cognitive control, timing and reward sensitivity were separable at a cognitive level and that deficits on these components segregated between individuals with ADHD. These results support a neurobiological framework of separate biological pathways to ADHD with separable cognitive deficits.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3517570?pdf=render
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