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A Low-Level Perceptual Correlate of Behavioral and Clinical Deficits in ADHD
Author(s) -
Andra Mihali,
Allison Young,
Lenard A. Adler,
Michael M. Halassa,
Wei Ji
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
computational psychiatry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2379-6227
DOI - 10.1162/cpsy_a_00018
Subject(s) - perception , psychology , stimulus (psychology) , cognition , executive functions , cognitive psychology , audiology , developmental psychology , neuroscience , medicine
In many studies of attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), stimulus encoding and processing (perceptual function) and response selection (executive function) have been intertwined. To dissociate deficits in these functions, we introduced a task that parametrically varied low-level stimulus features (orientation and color) for fine-grained analysis of perceptual function. It also required participants to switch their attention between feature dimensions on a trial-by-trial basis, thus taxing executive processes. Furthermore, we used a response paradigm that captured task-irrelevant motor output (TIMO), reflecting failures to use the correct stimulus-response rule. ADHD participants had substantially higher perceptual variability than controls, especially for orientation, as well as higher TIMO. In both ADHD and controls, TIMO was strongly affected by the switch manipulation. Across participants, the perceptual variability parameter was correlated with TIMO, suggesting that perceptual deficits are associated with executive function deficits. Based on perceptual variability alone, we were able to classify participants into ADHD and controls with a mean accuracy of about 77%. Participants' self-reported General Executive Composite score correlated not only with TIMO but also with the perceptual variability parameter. Our results highlight the role of perceptual deficits in ADHD and the usefulness of computational modeling of behavior in dissociating perceptual from executive processes.

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