4.7 Article

Behavioral Consequences of Aberrant Alpha Lateralization in Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder

Journal

BIOLOGICAL PSYCHIATRY
Volume 74, Issue 3, Pages 227-233

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.biopsych.2013.02.001

Keywords

ADHD; attention; bias; electroencephalography; magnetoencephalography (MEG); oscillations

Funding

  1. BrainGain
  2. Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO)
  3. NWO VICI scheme [453-09-002]
  4. Netherlands Initiative for Brain and Cognition The healthy brain scheme [056-14-011]

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Background: Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is characterized by problems in directing and sustaining attention. Recent findings suggest that alpha oscillations (8-12 Hz) are crucially involved in gating information between brain regions when allocating attention. The current study investigates whether aberrant modulation of alpha oscillations contributes to attention problems in ADHD patients. Methods: Magnetoencephalographic signals were recorded in adults with ADHD (n = 17) and healthy control subjects (n = 18) while they performed a visuospatial attention task. Cues directed attention to the left or right visual hemifield with an 80% validity with respect to the upcoming target. Results: Unlike the control group, subjects with ADHD showed a higher accuracy for invalidly cued right targets compared with invalidly cued left targets (p = .04). This coincided with an inability of the ADHD subjects to sustain the posterior hemispheric alpha lateralization in the period before the target for the left cue condition (p = .011). Furthermore, the control group showed a strong correlation between the degree of alpha lateralization and the magnitude of the cueing effect assessed in terms of accuracy (r(s) = .71, p = .001) and reaction times (r(s) = -.81, p < .001). These correlations were absent in the ADHD group. Conclusions: Our results demonstrate that subjects with ADHD have a failure in sustaining hemispheric alpha lateralization when cued to the left, resulting in an attentional bias to the right visual hemifield. These findings suggest that aberrant modulations of alpha oscillations reflect attention problems in ADHD and might be related to the neurophysiological substrate of the disorder.

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