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Audiovisual multisensory processing in young adults with Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder

Version 2 2024-06-04, 02:15
Version 1 2020-10-16, 09:02
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-04, 02:15 authored by HS McCracken, BA Murphy, JJ Burkitt, CM Glazebrook, Paul YielderPaul Yielder
Multisensory integration is a fundamental form of sensory processing that is involved in many everyday tasks. Those with Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) have characteristic alterations to various brain regions that may influence multisensory processing. The overall aim of this work was to assess how adults with ADHD process audiovisual multisensory stimuli during a complex response time task. The paradigm used was a two-alternative forced-choice discrimination task paired with continuous 64-electrode electroencephalography, allowing for the measurement of response time and accuracy to auditory, visual, and audiovisual multisensory conditions. Analysis revealed that those with ADHD () respond faster than neurotypical controls () when presented with auditory, visual, and audiovisual multisensory conditions, while also having race model violation in early response latency quantiles. Adults with ADHD also had more prominent multisensory processing over parietal-occipital brain regions at early post-stimulus latencies, indicating that altered brain structure may have important outcomes for audiovisual multisensory processing. The present study is the first to assess how those with ADHD respond to multisensory conditions during a complex response time task, and demonstrates that adults with ADHD have unique multisensory processing when assessing both behavioral response time measures and neurological measures.

History

Journal

Multisensory Research

Volume

33

Pagination

599-623

Location

Leiden, The Netherlands

ISSN

2213-4794

eISSN

2213-4808

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

6

Publisher

Brill