Altered salience processing in attention deficit hyperactivity disorder

Standard

Altered salience processing in attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. / Tegelbeckers, Jana; Bunzeck, Nico; Duzel, Emrah; Bonath, Björn; Flechtner, Hans-Henning; Krauel, Kerstin.

in: HUM BRAIN MAPP, Jahrgang 36, Nr. 6, 06.2015, S. 2049-60.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

Tegelbeckers, J, Bunzeck, N, Duzel, E, Bonath, B, Flechtner, H-H & Krauel, K 2015, 'Altered salience processing in attention deficit hyperactivity disorder', HUM BRAIN MAPP, Jg. 36, Nr. 6, S. 2049-60. https://doi.org/10.1002/hbm.22755

APA

Tegelbeckers, J., Bunzeck, N., Duzel, E., Bonath, B., Flechtner, H-H., & Krauel, K. (2015). Altered salience processing in attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. HUM BRAIN MAPP, 36(6), 2049-60. https://doi.org/10.1002/hbm.22755

Vancouver

Tegelbeckers J, Bunzeck N, Duzel E, Bonath B, Flechtner H-H, Krauel K. Altered salience processing in attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. HUM BRAIN MAPP. 2015 Jun;36(6):2049-60. https://doi.org/10.1002/hbm.22755

Bibtex

@article{18b15f199c234ec6a5e322c36d720e4c,
title = "Altered salience processing in attention deficit hyperactivity disorder",
abstract = "Attentional problems in patients with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) have often been linked with deficits in cognitive control. Whether these deficits are associated with increased sensitivity to external salient stimuli remains unclear. To address this issue, we acquired functional brain images (fMRI) in 38 boys with and without ADHD (age: 11-16 years). To differentiate the effects of item novelty, contextual rareness and task relevance, participants performed a visual oddball task including four stimulus categories: a frequent standard picture (62.5%), unique novel pictures (12.5%), one repeated rare picture (12.5%), and a target picture (12.5%) that required a specific motor response. As a main finding, we can show considerable overlap in novelty-related BOLD responses between both groups, but only healthy participants showed neural deactivation in temporal as well as frontal regions in response to novel pictures. Furthermore, only ADHD patients, but not healthy controls, engaged wide parts of the novelty network when processing the rare but familiar picture. Our results provide first evidence that ADHD patients show enhanced neural activity in response to novel but behaviorally irrelevant stimuli as well as reduced habituation to familiar items. These findings suggest an inefficient use of neuronal resources in children with ADHD that could be closely linked to increased distractibility.",
author = "Jana Tegelbeckers and Nico Bunzeck and Emrah Duzel and Bj{\"o}rn Bonath and Hans-Henning Flechtner and Kerstin Krauel",
note = "{\textcopyright} 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.",
year = "2015",
month = jun,
doi = "10.1002/hbm.22755",
language = "English",
volume = "36",
pages = "2049--60",
journal = "HUM BRAIN MAPP",
issn = "1065-9471",
publisher = "Wiley-Liss Inc.",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Altered salience processing in attention deficit hyperactivity disorder

AU - Tegelbeckers, Jana

AU - Bunzeck, Nico

AU - Duzel, Emrah

AU - Bonath, Björn

AU - Flechtner, Hans-Henning

AU - Krauel, Kerstin

N1 - © 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

PY - 2015/6

Y1 - 2015/6

N2 - Attentional problems in patients with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) have often been linked with deficits in cognitive control. Whether these deficits are associated with increased sensitivity to external salient stimuli remains unclear. To address this issue, we acquired functional brain images (fMRI) in 38 boys with and without ADHD (age: 11-16 years). To differentiate the effects of item novelty, contextual rareness and task relevance, participants performed a visual oddball task including four stimulus categories: a frequent standard picture (62.5%), unique novel pictures (12.5%), one repeated rare picture (12.5%), and a target picture (12.5%) that required a specific motor response. As a main finding, we can show considerable overlap in novelty-related BOLD responses between both groups, but only healthy participants showed neural deactivation in temporal as well as frontal regions in response to novel pictures. Furthermore, only ADHD patients, but not healthy controls, engaged wide parts of the novelty network when processing the rare but familiar picture. Our results provide first evidence that ADHD patients show enhanced neural activity in response to novel but behaviorally irrelevant stimuli as well as reduced habituation to familiar items. These findings suggest an inefficient use of neuronal resources in children with ADHD that could be closely linked to increased distractibility.

AB - Attentional problems in patients with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) have often been linked with deficits in cognitive control. Whether these deficits are associated with increased sensitivity to external salient stimuli remains unclear. To address this issue, we acquired functional brain images (fMRI) in 38 boys with and without ADHD (age: 11-16 years). To differentiate the effects of item novelty, contextual rareness and task relevance, participants performed a visual oddball task including four stimulus categories: a frequent standard picture (62.5%), unique novel pictures (12.5%), one repeated rare picture (12.5%), and a target picture (12.5%) that required a specific motor response. As a main finding, we can show considerable overlap in novelty-related BOLD responses between both groups, but only healthy participants showed neural deactivation in temporal as well as frontal regions in response to novel pictures. Furthermore, only ADHD patients, but not healthy controls, engaged wide parts of the novelty network when processing the rare but familiar picture. Our results provide first evidence that ADHD patients show enhanced neural activity in response to novel but behaviorally irrelevant stimuli as well as reduced habituation to familiar items. These findings suggest an inefficient use of neuronal resources in children with ADHD that could be closely linked to increased distractibility.

U2 - 10.1002/hbm.22755

DO - 10.1002/hbm.22755

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 25648705

VL - 36

SP - 2049

EP - 2060

JO - HUM BRAIN MAPP

JF - HUM BRAIN MAPP

SN - 1065-9471

IS - 6

ER -