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Journal of Attention Disorders
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Attribution and Self-Evaluation of Continuous Performance Test Task Performance in Medicated and Unmedicated Adults With ADHD

Katie Barrilleaux

Louisiana State University

Claire Advokat

Louisiana State University, cadvoka{at}lsu.edu

Objective: To determine if adults with ADHD differed from children with ADHD, in assessing their performance on the Conners Continuous Performance Test (CPT). Method: ADHD-diagnosed adults (n = 13) and adults without ADHD (n = 17) were tested twice on the CPT and then completed self-evaluation and attribution surveys. Results: Nonmedicated ADHD-diagnosed adults performed significantly more poorly than controls; when medicated, they performed as well as controls and significantly better than when they were unmedicated. AD/HD adults evaluated their performance accurately, whether medicated or not. They also attributed their performance to medication significantly more than to ability or task difficulty. Conclusion: Unlike children, ADHD-diagnosed adults attributed their performance to medication rather than ability or task. It remains to be seen whether this difference is associated with lower self-esteem than non-ADHD adults or if the same outcome would occur in children with ADHD if they were also tested under naturalistic conditions. (J. of Att. Dis. 2009; 12(4) 291-298)

Key Words: adult attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder • ADHD • AD/HD • Continuous Performance Test • CPT • self-serving bias

This version was published on January 1, 2009

Journal of Attention Disorders, Vol. 12, No. 4, 291-298 (2009)
DOI: 10.1177/1087054708314604


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