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RECENT PRESENTATIONS
Chellaramani, R., Pellouchoud, E., Smith,
M.E., Gevins, A. (2002). Effect of stimulant medication on attention
and working memory in children with ADHD. Cognitive Neuroscience
Society Ninth Annual Meeting. April, San Francisco.
ABSTRACT
Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder
(ADHD) in children is characterized by poor concentration, inattentiveness,
and a deficit in behavioral inhibition that may result in an inability
to sustain attention during working memory (WM) tasks. Children
diagnosed with ADHD are often treated with stimulant medications
that are thought to stifle hyperactivity, enhance concentration,
and perhaps improve the child's ability to sustain activation of
task-relevant representations. In this study fourteen children with
ADHD performed two difficulty levels of an "n-back" WM
task both on and off stimulant medication. EEG data were collected
during the WM task and under resting conditions. Average behavioral
and electrophysiological measurements across the two test sessions
indicated that these measures differed as a function of task load
in a manner similar to that observed in healthy adults. Specifically
reaction time increased, accuracy decreased, and the EEG alpha rhythm
during task performance deceased as task difficulty increased. On
average performance accuracy was higher and reaction times were
faster in the medicated condition, but these effects did not reach
significance. Medication decreased theta band power and increased
P300 ERP amplitude in low load task condition. These modest group
effects mask relatively large effects on different behavioral and
EEG measures in individual subjects. Such high between-subject variability
might reflect variations in abilities, symptoms, and treatments
in children with ADHD. Such effects are also consistent with the
notion that children with ADHD differ in the degree to which they
respond positively to stimulant medication. Supported by NICHD and
NIMH.
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