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Atypical interference control in children with AD/HD with elevated theta/beta ratio

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posted on 2024-11-14, 18:23 authored by Dawei Zhang, Steven RoodenrysSteven Roodenrys, Hui Li, Robert BarryRobert Barry, Adam ClarkeAdam Clarke, Zhanliang Wu, Qihua Zhao, Yanlin Song, Lu Liu, Qiujin Qian, Yufeng Wang, Stuart JohnstoneStuart Johnstone, Li-Chao Sun
The theta/beta ratio (TBR) is a major area of interest within electroencephalogram (EEG) research in AD/HD. While researchers suggest a prognostic role for TBR in AD/HD, its relationship to behavior remains uncertain. Recent evidence suggests that elevated TBR in AD/HD may be related to atypical inhibition, particularly at an attentional level. This study aimed to examine the performance on three inhibitory tasks of children with AD/HD. Fifty-eight children with AD/HD participated, divided into an elevated TBR (ET) group and a control group (CT). A behavioral disassociation was found − compared to CT, ET showed more difficulty in inhibiting surrounding stimuli but had less day-to-day inhibitory issues measured by BRIEF. There was no significant group difference on response inhibition. The results support the prognostic value of TBR in AD/HD. Elevated TBR may be an inhibitory biomarker; further studies are needed to explore the behavioral implications in patients without elevated TBR.

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Citation

Zhang, D., Roodenrys, S., Li, H., Barry, R., Clarke, A., Wu, Z., Zhao, Q., Song, Y., Liu, L., Qian, Q., Wang, Y., Johnstone, S. & Sun, L. (2017). Atypical interference control in children with AD/HD with elevated theta/beta ratio. Biological Psychology, 128 82-88.

Journal title

Biological Psychology

Volume

128

Pagination

82-88

Language

English

RIS ID

115644

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