2019
DOI: 10.1007/s00702-019-02049-1
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Basic processes as foundations of cognitive impairment in adult ADHD

Abstract: Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in adulthood is associated with impairment of multiple aspects of cognition which adversely affect the individual’s everyday functioning. However, little is known about how these impairments are intertwined. This study explores whether impairments in basic processes (processing speed and distractibility) in adults with ADHD explain impairments in higher order functions, namely executive functions, memory, and complex attention. Furthermore, it is explored whether… Show more

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Cited by 34 publications
(52 citation statements)
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References 54 publications
(124 reference statements)
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“…Further research is therefore needed on the extent to which neuropsychological tests can effectively be used to guide psychological interventions. Finally, findings of earlier research (Butzbach et al 2019; Holst and Thorell 2017) could be confirmed by demonstrating significant correlations between basic cognitive functions and higher-order cognitive functions in the ADHD group. The observed associations support the impairments in basic functions may lead to impairments in higher-order functions, such as aspects of complex attention and executive control.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 60%
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“…Further research is therefore needed on the extent to which neuropsychological tests can effectively be used to guide psychological interventions. Finally, findings of earlier research (Butzbach et al 2019; Holst and Thorell 2017) could be confirmed by demonstrating significant correlations between basic cognitive functions and higher-order cognitive functions in the ADHD group. The observed associations support the impairments in basic functions may lead to impairments in higher-order functions, such as aspects of complex attention and executive control.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 60%
“…However, we expect that effect sizes of impairments between groups differ across functions and will not exceed small to medium size (Boonstra et al 2005;Hervey et al 2004;Marchetta et al 2008;Mostert et al 2015;Pettersson et al 2018). Moreover, as motivated by previous findings (Butzbach et al 2019;Holst and Thorell 2017;Boonstra et al 2010), we aim to quantify the effect of basic cognitive functions (i.e., processing speed and distractibility) on more complex cognitive functions (i.e., different aspects of complex attention and executive control) in adults with ADHD and seek to determine whether this hierarchical relationship is shaped differently in groups not having ADHD, such as being diagnosed with other psychiatric disorders or did not fulfill the diagnostic criteria of any psychiatric disorders.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 74%
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“…Another limitation is that adult ADHD was not subtyped (i.e., predominantly inattentive, predominantly hyperactive-impulsive, combined), but cognitive dysfunctions were not reported to be consistently different across these subtypes (Tucha et al 2008;LeRoy et al 2019). Moreover, our comprehensive battery of objective neuropsychological tests (Tucha et al 2015) included the main domains, but did not assess some ADHD−related behavioral features (e.g., reward responsivity, emotional dysregulation, and temporal discounting) and basic processes that have been hypothesized to contribute to higher order cognitive dysfunction in adult ADHD (Butzbach et al 2019). Future studies should include a larger number of neuropsychological measures (Fuermaier et al 2019).…”
Section: Limitationsmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…This indicates that the more inattentive symptoms are present, the lower metacognitive abilities may be, which could point toward the relevance of bottom-up processing for attention and metacognition. Basic processes may constitute part of the foundation of cognitive deficits in adult ADHD (Butzbach et al, 2019;Guo et al, 2020). One may suggest that impairments in attention may result in impairments in higher order functions building up on them (metacognition) in adults with ADHD.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%