Abstract
Using a two-stimulus reaction time paradigm, with two separate reward conditions (contingent and noncontingent), we compared slow wave brain potentials (ERPs) in 144 children with attention deficit disorder (ADD) and 30 normal control children. This article reviews the findings during the 900 msec visual warning stimulus.
As we had expected, based on ERP work of Forth and Hare (1989) and Raine, Venables and Williams (1990), and on previous work from our own laboratory, the group differences were found in the negative slow wave portions of the ERP complex during the contingent reward condition but not during the noncontingent condition. Aggressive hyperactive subjects with attention deficit disorder (ADDHA) were discriminated from nonaggressive subjects (including control subjects) during the contingent reward condition in the following ways: (1) greater fronto-central negativity (640–900 msec slow wave) and (2) greater right parietal than left parietal negativity (430–750 msec slow wave).
All ADD subgroups, when compared to control (CONTR) subjects, showed greater slow wave negativity (700–900 msec) at the midline occipital electrode site during the contingent reward condition. This could be explained in part as an IQ effect on ERPs reflecting the IQ difference between the ADD subgroups and the controls.
These slow wave findings seem to relate to attentional problems of these children. They are discussed in terms of a psychobiological model of inhibition/disinhibition and appetitive activation.
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This research was supported by NIHM grant MH39189 to Dr. Dykman, and by the Marie Wilson Howells Memorial Fund to the Department of Psychiatry, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences.
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Newton, J.E.O., Oglesby, D.M., Ackerman, P.T. et al. Visual slow brain potentials in children with attention deficit disorder. Integrative Physiological and Behavioral Science 29, 39–54 (1994). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02691280
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02691280