Litcius/Paper detail

Social functioning in children with ADHD: an examination of inhibition, self-control, and working memory as potential mediators

Caitlin C. Bullard, R. Matt Alderson, Delanie K. Roberts, Miho O. Tatsuki, Maureen A. Sullivan, Michael Kofler

2024Child Neuropsychology12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Children with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) experience a host of social problems, in addition to significant impairments in behavioral inhibition, working memory, and self-control. Behavioral inhibition and working memory difficulties have been linked with social functioning deficits, but to date, most studies have examined these neurocognitive problems either in isolation or as an aggregate measure in relation to social problems, and none has considered the role of self-control. Thus, it remains unclear whether all of these executive functions are linked with social problems or if the link can be more parsimoniously explained by construct overlap. Fifty-eight children with ADHD and 63 typically developing (TD) children completed tests assessing self-control, behavioral inhibition, and working memory; parents and teachers rated children's social functioning. Examination of potential indirect effects with the bootstrapping procedure indicated that working memory mediated the relation between group membership (ADHD, TD) and child social functioning based on teacher but not parent ratings. Behavioral inhibition and self-control did not have direct relations with either parent- or teacher-rated social functioning. These findings point to important differences regarding how executive functioning difficulties manifest at school compared to home, as well as the specific executive function components that predict ADHD-related social difficulties.

Topics & Concepts

PsychologyWorking memoryNeurocognitiveDevelopmental psychologyExecutive functionsConstruct (python library)Attentional controlSelf-controlCognitionClinical psychologyPsychiatryComputer scienceProgramming languageAttention Deficit Hyperactivity DisorderChild and Adolescent Psychosocial and Emotional DevelopmentNeural and Behavioral Psychology Studies
Social functioning in children with ADHD: an examination of inhibition, self-control, and working memory as potential mediators | Litcius