4.3 Article

Decision-Making Deficits in ADHD Are Not Related to Risk Seeking But to Suboptimal Decision-Making: Meta-Analytical and Novel Experimental Evidence

期刊

JOURNAL OF ATTENTION DISORDERS
卷 25, 期 4, 页码 486-501

出版社

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/1087054718815572

关键词

ADHD; decision-making; risk-taking; expected value; meta-analysis

资金

  1. VICI grant [45312015]
  2. MaGW grant from the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO) [48012015]
  3. Authority for Research and Development from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem

向作者/读者索取更多资源

ADHD is associated with decision-making deficits, driven by suboptimal decision-making rather than risk taking. Studies have shown that individuals with ADHD tend to make more risky or suboptimal choices compared to controls.
Objective: ADHD is related to decision-making deficits in real-life (e.g., substance abuse) and on experimental tasks (increased preference for risky options). In most tasks, risk and expected value are confounded (risky options have lowest expected value), making it impossible to disentangle risky from suboptimal (i.e., not choosing highest expected value) decision-making. We differentiated between risky and suboptimal decision-making in ADHD in two studies. Method and Results: First, on a multilevel meta-regression analysis (k = 48, n_ADHD = 1,144, n_Control = 1,108), ADHD and controls differed if the risky option was suboptimal (ADHD choosing more risky/suboptimal), whereas groups performed similar if the risky option was not suboptimal. Second, an empirical study showed that adults with ADHD (n = 40) made more suboptimal, but not more risky choices than controls (n = 40). Conclusion: These results contribute to a growing body of evidence that decision-making deficits in ADHD are driven by suboptimal decision-making and not by risk seeking.

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