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- Title
Effort Allocation in Children With ADHD: Abnormal Decision-Making or Poor Execution?
- Authors
Winter, Yael; Ben-Pazi, Hilla; Pollak, Yehuda
- Abstract
Objective: Effort allocation is a multi-faceted process driving both the decision to choose a high effort-high reward alternative over a low effort-low reward alternative, and the execution of this decision by recruiting sufficient effort. The objectives of our study were to examine whether children with ADHD would (a) show different reward-effort cost trade-off, and (b) have difficulty executing their decision. Method: 50 children, aged 9 to 15, with and without ADHD, had to choose between high effort-high reward and low effort-low reward alternatives using a handheld dynamometer and to execute their choice. Results: Children with ADHD and controls made similar number of high-effort choices (p = .806). However, children with ADHD executed their high-effort choices less frequently compared with controls (p = .029). Conclusion: These findings suggest that children with ADHD are not characterized by different effort-reward trade-off but rather by difficulties in recruiting effort for their preferences implementation.
- Subjects
ATTENTION-deficit hyperactivity disorder; DYNAMOMETER; MEDICAL decision making; COST effectiveness; CONJOINT analysis; DECISION making; REWARD (Psychology)
- Publication
Journal of Attention Disorders, 2019, Vol 23, Issue 11, p1240
- ISSN
1087-0547
- Publication type
journal article
- DOI
10.1177/1087054716654569