4.5 Article

Electrophysiological modulation of sensory and attentional processes during mind wandering in attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder

Journal

NEUROIMAGE-CLINICAL
Volume 29, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.nicl.2020.102547

Keywords

ADHD; Mind wandering; Perceptual decoupling; Attention allocation; Event-related potentials

Categories

Funding

  1. NIHR Biomedical Research Centre at South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust and King's College London
  2. NIHR/MRC [14/23/17]
  3. NIHR Senior Investigator award [NF-SI-0616-10040]
  4. Medical Research Council

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The study found that individuals with ADHD exhibit deficits in early sensory processing and attention allocation during tasks with high cognitive demands, and these differences were not significant after controlling for MW frequency. Adults with ADHD show attenuated early sensory processing during task focus compared to controls, but not during mind wandering episodes.
We recently reported increased mind wandering (MW) frequency in adults with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) relative to controls during high demands on sustained attention, reflecting deficient context regulation of MW. Studies on community samples previously linked context regulation of MW with attenuation in brain sensory processes, reflecting perceptual decoupling, and attentional processes during MW compared to task focus. However, the association between deficient context regulation of MW and these neural processes has not been studied in ADHD. We addressed this question by comparing adults with ADHD (N = 23) and controls (N = 25) on event-related potentials of early sensory processes (P1) and attention allocation (P3) during tasks manipulating cognitive demands (high vs low) on working memory and sustained attention, and during periods of MW and task focus measured through experience-sampling. Compared to controls, adults with ADHD showed reduced P1 during high sustained attention demands, as well as reduced P3 during high working memory demands. These group differences were no longer significant after adding MW frequency as a covariate. Across tasks, adults with ADHD showed no differences from controls on the P1 during MW episodes, but attenuated P1 during task focus. P3 was reduced in adults with ADHD compared to controls during MW, but not during task focus during the sustained attention task. These findings converge to indicate that impairments in early sensory processing in individuals with ADHD seem parallel to increased MW frequency and might reflect inefficient adjustments from periods of MW to task focus.

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