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Dissociating Slow Responses From Slow Responding

  • G. Salunkhe
  • , B. Feige
  • , Christopher Saville
  • , Maria-Elena Stefanou
  • , David Linden
  • , Stephan Bender
  • , Andrea Berger
  • , N. Smyrnis
  • , M. Biscaldi
  • , Christoph Klein
    • University of Freiburg
    • University of Reading
    • University of Cologne
    • National and Kapodistrian University of Athens
    • Maastricht University
    • Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    130 Downloads (Pure)

    Abstract

    Increased Intra-Subject Variability (ISV) is a candidate endophenotype of ADHD. ISV's relationship with response speed is highly relevant for ADHD as patients are highly variable but typically no slower than controls. This brief report addresses the relationship between variability and speed by employing dimensional analyses for differentiated performance measures, with a particular focus on the ex-Gaussian measures, across relevant ADHD studies and in young healthy adults (N = 70). For both patients with ADHD and healthy adults, we found that reaction time standard deviation and mean reaction time were strongly correlated, thus failing to dissociate, but ex-Gaussian tau (τ) shared only little variance with Gaussian mu (μ), thus dissociating slow responses (τ) from response speed or-if given-slow responding (μ). Our results highlight the utility of employing the ex-Gaussian measures to disentangle ISV and speed, particularly for ADHD data as patients make more slow responses but are not overall slower than typical controls.

    Original languageEnglish
    Article number505800
    JournalFrontiers in Psychiatry
    Volume11
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2 Oct 2020

    Keywords

    • attention-deficit
    • hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)
    • intra-subject variability
    • response speed
    • ex-Gaussian modeling
    • principal components analyses

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