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- Title
Exploring the biases of the perception of inattention, hyperactivity, and impulsivity of students from parents, teachers, self‐reports, and a VR measure.
- Authors
Cho, Yeon‐Ji; Son, Ha Min; Chung, Tai‐Myoung; Kim, Jaehyoun
- Abstract
Symptoms of inattention (IA), hyperactivity, and impulsivity present in school‐aged children are important indications of developmental problems. The assessment of these symptoms largely relies on questionnaires completed by parents, teachers, and the children themselves. However, inherent perceptual biases may lead to inaccuracies in these evaluations. This study investigates the biases among different respondents for 41 elementary‐aged students (19 male and 22 female) by analyzing their responses on the attention‐deficit/hyperactivity disorder‐rating scale (ADHD‐RS) through a novel virtual reality‐based objective measure (AttnKare‐D). Correlation analysis reveals higher agreement between parents and students compared to other informant pairs. Nevertheless, when compared with the objective measure, parents and students do not exhibit distinct separation between high and low‐scoring samples, whereas teachers demonstrate significant separation on various objective measure factors. This discrepancy suggests that teachers may possess a more accurate baseline for peer‐related measurements, leading to a more objective evaluation of ADHD symptoms. However, it is essential to acknowledge that teachers are not entirely exempt from biases. Gender‐specific comparisons reveal notable differences, with male children showing the largest separation in distractibility and female children in movement. In conclusion, this study emphasizes the significance of recognizing and addressing potential biases when interpreting questionnaires assessing symptoms of IA, hyperactivity, and impulsivity in children. Practitioner points: Recognize bias in assessing ADHD symptoms in children through parent, teacher, and self‐reports.Teachers provide more objective evaluation of ADHD symptoms when compared with objective measure.Distractibility is the primary factor for males, and movement is the main factor for females in ADHD assessment by teachers.
- Subjects
PARENTS; HYPERACTIVITY; IMPULSIVE personality; YOUTH with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder; TEACHERS; SCHOOL children; STATISTICAL correlation; CONTINUOUS performance test
- Publication
Psychology in the Schools, 2024, Vol 61, Issue 6, p2567
- ISSN
0033-3085
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1002/pits.23179