AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study investigates how children with ADHD and typically developing children remember self-relevant information, focusing on their ability to attend to, encode, and retrieve memories linked to themselves versus others.
  • - In the first task, typically developing children remembered self-referenced objects better than other-referenced ones, showing a significant self-reference effect (SRE), while children with ADHD did not exhibit this effect.
  • - In the second task, all groups, including those with ADHD, displayed better memory for actions they performed versus those performed by others, indicating that the enactment effect remains intact in children with ADHD.

Article Abstract

The self-memory system depends on the prioritization and capture of self-relevant information, so may be disrupted by difficulties in attending to, encoding and retrieving self-relevant information. The current study compares memory for self-referenced and other-referenced items in children with ADHD and typically developing comparison groups matched for verbal and chronological age. Children aged 5-14 (N = 90) were presented with everyday objects alongside an own-face image (self-reference trials) or an unknown child's image (other-referenced trials). They were asked whether the child shown would like the object, before completing a surprise source memory test. In a second task, children performed, and watched another person perform, a series of actions before their memory for the actions was tested. A significant self-reference effect (SRE) was found in the typically developing children (i.e. both verbal and chronological age-matched comparison groups) for the first task, with significantly better memory for self-referenced than other-referenced objects. However, children with ADHD showed no SRE, suggesting a compromised ability to bind information with the cognitive self-concept. In the second task, all groups showed superior memory for actions carried out by the self, suggesting a preserved enactment effect in ADHD. Implications and applications for the self-memory system in ADHD are discussed.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/bjdp.12489DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study investigates how children with ADHD and typically developing children remember self-relevant information, focusing on their ability to attend to, encode, and retrieve memories linked to themselves versus others.
  • - In the first task, typically developing children remembered self-referenced objects better than other-referenced ones, showing a significant self-reference effect (SRE), while children with ADHD did not exhibit this effect.
  • - In the second task, all groups, including those with ADHD, displayed better memory for actions they performed versus those performed by others, indicating that the enactment effect remains intact in children with ADHD.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

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