Emotional dysregulation in daily life is very common in children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). It is however not clear whether this reflects a specific deficit or that it may be the result of generic executive function (EF) deficits. The current study addresses this question by means of an emotional working memory (WM) task with 2 memory load conditions and four possible backgrounds (blank screen, neutral, positive or negative picture), which was administered to 38 typically developing children and 29 children with ADHD. Children responded slower on trials when negative pictures were presented at the background versus when neutral pictures were presented, indicating an emotional interference effect; however crucially, groups did not differ in this respect. Reaction times were also slower on trials with a neutral picture as background versus trials without a picture, with children with ADHD showing an enhanced interference effect. There was a main effect of WM load on performance, but it did not interact with interference or group effects. To summarize, the findings indicate a generic interference control deficit in the children with ADHD in the current sample, while they could not provide support for an emotional interference deficit.
What this paper adds:This paper adds to the existing literature on emotion regulation in children with ADHD by addressing the question whether emotional dysregulation in ADHD reflects a specific deficit or whether it may be understood as an integral part of impaired executive functioning. An emotional n-back task with different backgrounds was applied to distinguish between emotional interference and generic interference effects. The findings could not provide support for a specific emotional interference deficit. Rather, a generic interference control deficit was found, which may have important theoretical and clinical implications.