- NICHE - Research
- NICHE - The lab
- We are NICHE
- Sarah
- Imaging genetics in ADHD: A focus on cognitive control
- Magnetic Resonance Simulation Is Effective in Reducing Anxiety Related To Magnetic Resonance Scanning in Children
- Dopamine transporter genotype conveys familial risk of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder through striatal activation
- Neural and behavioral correlates of expectancy violations in attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder
- Activation in Ventral Prefrontal Cortex is Sensitive to Genetic Vulnerability for Attention-Decit Hyperactivity Disorder
- A shift from diffuse to focal cortical activity with development
- What have we learned about cognitive development from neuroimaging?
- Differential effects of DRD4 and DAT1 genotype on fronto-striatal gray matter volumes in a sample of subjects with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, their unaffected siblings, and controls
- Parametric manipulation of conflict and response competition using rapid mixed-trial event-related fMRI
- Differential Patterns of Striatal Activation in Young Children with and without ADHD
- The Effect of Preceding Context on Inhibition: An Event-Related fMRI Study
- Anatomical MRI of the Developing Human Brain: What Have We Learned?
- Marieke
- Fronto-striatal circuitry and inhibitory control in autism: Findings from diffusion tensor imaging tractography
- The neurobiology of repetitive behavior: Of mice...
- The neurobiology of repetitive behavior: ...and men
- Changes in the developmental trajectories of striatum in autism
- Caudate nucleus is enlarged in high-functioning medication-naive subjects with autism
- Tamar
- Patrick
- Inhibitory Performance, ResponseSpeed, Intraindividual Variability, and Response Accuracy in ADHD
- Decreased Frontostriatal Microstructural Organization in Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder
- Prenatal exposure to cigarette smoke or alcohol and cerebellum volume in attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder and typical development
- Differential Brain Development with Low and High IQ in Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder
- Janna
- Sarai
- Sanne
- Dienke
- Lara
- Branko
- Juliette
- Rosanne
- Nieke
- Lizanne
- Sanne
- Kelli
- Sara
- Sarah
- Alumni
- We are NICHE
- Library
- News
- Jobs/ internships
- Ask Niche
- Symposium
Niche Lab - Neuroimaging In Childhood
Neural and behavioral correlates of expectancy violations in attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder
Neural and behavioral correlates of expectancy violations in attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder
Sarah Durston, Matthew C. Davidson, Martijn J. Mulder, Julie A. Spicer,
Adriana Galvan, Nim Tottenham, Anouk Scheres, F. Xavier Castellanos,
Herman van Engeland and B.J. Casey - Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry 48:9 (2007), pp 881–889
Background: Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a prevalent neuropsychiatric disorder in childhood with established problems in cognitive control and associated fronto-striatal circuitry. More recently, fronto-cerebellar circuits have been implicated in this disorder. Both of these circuits are important in predicting the occurrence and timing of behaviorally relevant events and in detecting violations of these predictions. Therefore, we hypothesized that the ability to predict the occurrence of frequent events would be compromised in ADHD, as well as the ability to adapt behavior when expectancy was violated.
Methods: We used rapid, mixed-trial, event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to examine cognitive and neural processes in two independent samples of children and adolescents with ADHD and matched controls. Subjects performed a variation of a go-no/go task where the predictability of stimulus identity (what) and timing (when) was manipulated.
Results: Behaviorally, children and adolescents with ADHD had increased variability in reaction times, and decreased benefit in reaction time when events were predictable. Differences in accuracy between groups were most reliable for temporally unpredictable trials. Functional imaging results from both samples showed that relative to the control children and adolescents, individuals with ADHD had diminished cerebellar activity to violations of stimulus timing and diminished ventral prefrontal and anterior cingulate activity to violations in stimulus timing and identity.
Conclusions: These findings are consistent with the view that disruptive behaviors in inappropriate contexts, a major criterion in diagnosing ADHD, may be related to an impaired ability to predict temporal and contextual cues in the environment, thus hindering the ability to alter behavior when they change. This ability requires intact fronto-cerebellar, as well as fronto-striatal circuitry.
Meer weten?
Download het
onderzoek hier!
Auteur
Naam Sarah Durston
Functie Niche head of NICHE Lab

Made by: The Projects