No evidence of associations between ADHD and event-related brain potentials from a continuous performance task in a population-based sample of adolescent twins.

We investigated key event-related brain potential markers (ERPs) derived from a flanked continuous performance task (CPT) and whether these would show phenotypic associations with ADHD (attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder) in a population-based sample. We further explored whether there was prel...

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Main Authors: Alex Lau-Zhu, Charlotte Tye, Frühling Rijsdijk, Grainne McLoughlin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2019-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0223460
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author Alex Lau-Zhu
Charlotte Tye
Frühling Rijsdijk
Grainne McLoughlin
author_facet Alex Lau-Zhu
Charlotte Tye
Frühling Rijsdijk
Grainne McLoughlin
author_sort Alex Lau-Zhu
collection DOAJ
description We investigated key event-related brain potential markers (ERPs) derived from a flanked continuous performance task (CPT) and whether these would show phenotypic associations with ADHD (attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder) in a population-based sample. We further explored whether there was preliminary evidence that such ERPs could also index genetic risk for ADHD (depending on finding phenotypic associations). Sixty-seven male-only twin pairs (N = 134; aged 12-15) from a subsample of the Twins' Early Development Study, concordant and discordant for ADHD symptoms, performed the flanked CPT (or CPT-OX) while electroencephalography (EEG) was recorded. ERPs were obtained for cue (P3, CNV or contingency negative variation), go (P3, N2) and nogo trials (P3, N2). We found no phenotypic associations between CPT-derived ERPs and ADHD-the sizes of the estimated phenotypic correlations were nonsignificant and very small (r's = -.11 to .04). Twin-model fitting analyses using structural equation modelling provided preliminary evidence that some of the ERPs were heritable (with the most robust effect for go-P3 latency), but there was limited evidence of any genetic associations between ERPs and ADHD, although with the caveat that our sample was small and hence had limited power. Overall, unlike in previous research, there was no evidence of phenotypic (nor preliminary evidence for genetic) associations between ADHD and CPT-derived ERPs in this study. Hence, it may be currently premature for genetic analyses of ADHD to be guided by CPT-derived ERP parameters (unlike alternative cognitive-neurophysiological approaches which may be more promising). Further research with better-powered, population-based, genetically-informative and cross-disorder samples are required, which could be facilitated by emerging mobile EEG technologies.
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spelling doaj.art-624e0e65522a4eb4b02aee378ce84fc32022-12-21T23:09:37ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032019-01-011410e022346010.1371/journal.pone.0223460No evidence of associations between ADHD and event-related brain potentials from a continuous performance task in a population-based sample of adolescent twins.Alex Lau-ZhuCharlotte TyeFrühling RijsdijkGrainne McLoughlinWe investigated key event-related brain potential markers (ERPs) derived from a flanked continuous performance task (CPT) and whether these would show phenotypic associations with ADHD (attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder) in a population-based sample. We further explored whether there was preliminary evidence that such ERPs could also index genetic risk for ADHD (depending on finding phenotypic associations). Sixty-seven male-only twin pairs (N = 134; aged 12-15) from a subsample of the Twins' Early Development Study, concordant and discordant for ADHD symptoms, performed the flanked CPT (or CPT-OX) while electroencephalography (EEG) was recorded. ERPs were obtained for cue (P3, CNV or contingency negative variation), go (P3, N2) and nogo trials (P3, N2). We found no phenotypic associations between CPT-derived ERPs and ADHD-the sizes of the estimated phenotypic correlations were nonsignificant and very small (r's = -.11 to .04). Twin-model fitting analyses using structural equation modelling provided preliminary evidence that some of the ERPs were heritable (with the most robust effect for go-P3 latency), but there was limited evidence of any genetic associations between ERPs and ADHD, although with the caveat that our sample was small and hence had limited power. Overall, unlike in previous research, there was no evidence of phenotypic (nor preliminary evidence for genetic) associations between ADHD and CPT-derived ERPs in this study. Hence, it may be currently premature for genetic analyses of ADHD to be guided by CPT-derived ERP parameters (unlike alternative cognitive-neurophysiological approaches which may be more promising). Further research with better-powered, population-based, genetically-informative and cross-disorder samples are required, which could be facilitated by emerging mobile EEG technologies.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0223460
spellingShingle Alex Lau-Zhu
Charlotte Tye
Frühling Rijsdijk
Grainne McLoughlin
No evidence of associations between ADHD and event-related brain potentials from a continuous performance task in a population-based sample of adolescent twins.
PLoS ONE
title No evidence of associations between ADHD and event-related brain potentials from a continuous performance task in a population-based sample of adolescent twins.
title_full No evidence of associations between ADHD and event-related brain potentials from a continuous performance task in a population-based sample of adolescent twins.
title_fullStr No evidence of associations between ADHD and event-related brain potentials from a continuous performance task in a population-based sample of adolescent twins.
title_full_unstemmed No evidence of associations between ADHD and event-related brain potentials from a continuous performance task in a population-based sample of adolescent twins.
title_short No evidence of associations between ADHD and event-related brain potentials from a continuous performance task in a population-based sample of adolescent twins.
title_sort no evidence of associations between adhd and event related brain potentials from a continuous performance task in a population based sample of adolescent twins
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0223460
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