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Examining reaction time variability on the stop-signal task in the ABCD study. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • This study investigates how different reaction time (RT) models—Gaussian, ex-Gaussian, and diffusion model (DM)—interrelate in analyzing reaction time variability (RTV) among children aged 9-10, using data from a large sample (8916 kids).
  • The findings reveal no direct one-to-one relationship between DM and ex-Gaussian parameters, with drift rate showing a strong link to RT standard deviation, while performance was found to decline over time mainly due to decreased drift rates. Boys exhibited faster and less variable RTs compared to girls, attributed to differences in boundary separation.
  • The study concludes that understanding the interconnections among RT model parameters is essential for interpreting performance

Article Abstract

Objective: Reaction time variability (RTV) has been estimated using Gaussian, ex-Gaussian, and diffusion model (DM) indices. Rarely have studies examined interrelationships among these performance indices in childhood, and the use of reaction time (RT) computational models has been slow to take hold in the developmental psychopathology literature. Here, we extend prior work in adults by examining the interrelationships among different model parameters in the ABCD sample and demonstrate how computational models of RT can clarify mechanisms of time-on-task effects and sex differences in RTs.

Method: This study utilized trial-level data from the stop signal task from 8916 children (9-10 years old) to examine Gaussian, ex-Gaussian, and DM indicators of RTV. In addition to describing RTV patterns, we examined interrelations among these indicators, temporal patterns, and sex differences.

Results: There was no one-to-one correspondence between DM and ex-Gaussian parameters. Nonetheless, drift rate was most strongly associated with standard deviation of RT and tau, while nondecisional processes were most strongly associated with RT, mu, and sigma. Performance worsened across time with changes driven primarily by decreasing drift rate. Boys were faster and less variable than girls, likely attributable to girls' wide boundary separation.

Conclusions: Intercorrelations among model parameters are similar in children as has been observed in adults. Computational approaches play a crucial role in understanding performance changes over time and can also clarify mechanisms of group differences. For example, standard RT models may incorrectly suggest slowed processing speed in girls that is actually attributable to other factors.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9971352PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S1355617722000431DOI Listing

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