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RESEARCH PRODUCT
The relationship between ADHD and key cognitive phenotypes is not mediated by shared familial effects with IQ
Iris ManorB. AlbrechtAna MirandaNanda RommelseJoseph A. SergeantGráinne McloughlinAribert RothenbergerJonna KuntsiStephen V. FaraoneFruhling RijsdijkJan K. BuitelaarAlejandro Arias-vasquezPhilip AshersonFernando MulasHerbert RoeyersEdmund J.s. Sonuga-barkeEdmund J.s. Sonuga-barkeKatherine A JohnsonKatherine A JohnsonAlexis C. WoodAlexis C. WoodJ. J. Van Der MeereHenrik UebelMichael GillHans-christoph SteinhausenHans-christoph SteinhausenHans-christoph SteinhausenRobert D. OadesTobias BanaschewskiPenelope Andreousubject
Male110 012 Social cognition of verbal communicationInhibition (Psychology)PsychometricsIntelligenceMedizinPerception and Actions Mental Health [DCN 1]CHILDRENCHILDHOOD ADHDNeuropsychological TestsheritabilityPersonality AssessmentChoice BehaviorDevelopmental psychology0302 clinical medicineExterne » Sonstige EinrichtungenMedicine and Health SciencesPerception and Action [DCN 1]ChildInternal-External ControlApplied PsychologyIntelligence quotientATTENTION-DEFICIT/HYPERACTIVITY DISORDERCognitionEuropeInhibition PsychologicalPsychiatry and Mental healthPhenotypeFemalemedicine.symptomPsychologyFunctional Neurogenomics [DCN 2]AdolescentPsychometricsDEFICIT HYPERACTIVITY DISORDERintermediate phenotypeINHIBITIONImpulsivityMental health [NCEBP 9]behavioral disciplines and activitiesArticle150 000 MR Techniques in Brain FunctioncognitiveADHD; cognitive; heritability; IQ; intermediate phenotype03 medical and health sciencesRewardmental disordersReaction TimemedicineHumansAttention deficit hyperactivity disorderADHDEffects of sleep deprivation on cognitive performanceddc:610SiblingENDOPHENOTYPESDELAY AVERSIONPERFORMANCEmedicine.disease030227 psychiatryAttention Deficit Disorder with HyperactivityIQEndophenotypeMultivariate AnalysisRESPONSE VARIABILITYSUSTAINED ATTENTIONCognition Disorders030217 neurology & neurosurgerydescription
BackgroundTwin and sibling studies have identified specific cognitive phenotypes that may mediate the association between genes and the clinical symptoms of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). ADHD is also associated with lower IQ scores. We aimed to investigate whether the familial association between measures of cognitive performance and the clinical diagnosis of ADHD is mediated through shared familial influences with IQ.MethodMultivariate familial models were run on data from 1265 individuals aged 6–18 years, comprising 920 participants from ADHD sibling pairs and 345 control participants. Cognitive assessments included a four-choice reaction time (RT) task, a go/no-go task, a choice–delay task and an IQ assessment. The analyses focused on the cognitive variables of mean RT (MRT), RT variability (RTV), commission errors (CE), omission errors (OE) and choice impulsivity (CI).ResultsSignificant familial association (rF) was confirmed between cognitive performance and both ADHD (rF=0.41–0.71) and IQ (rF=−0.25 to −0.49). The association between ADHD and cognitive performance was largely independent (80–87%) of any contribution from etiological factors shared with IQ. The exception was for CI, where 49% of the overlap could be accounted for by the familial variance underlying IQ.ConclusionsThe aetiological factors underlying lower IQ in ADHD seem to be distinct from those between ADHD and RT/error measures. This suggests that lower IQ does not account for the key cognitive impairments observed in ADHD. The results have implications for molecular genetic studies designed to identify genes involved in ADHD.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2011-04-01 | Psychological Medicine |