Comparison of Executive function in Children with ADHD, Asperger's Disorder, and Learning Disorder

주의력결핍과잉행동 장애, 아스퍼거 장애, 학습 장애 아동의 실행기능 비교

  • Shin Min-Sup (Department of Psychiatry and Institute of Human Behavioral Medicine, Seoul National University College of Medicine) ;
  • Kim Hyun-Mi (Department of Child-Adolescent Psychiatry, Seoul National University Children's Hospital) ;
  • On Shine-Geal (Department of Child-Adolescent Psychiatry, Seoul National University Children's Hospital) ;
  • Hwang Jun-Won (Department of Psychiatry and Institute of Human Behavioral Medicine, Seoul National University College of Medicine) ;
  • Kim Boong-Nyun (Department of Psychiatry and Institute of Human Behavioral Medicine, Seoul National University College of Medicine) ;
  • Cho Soo-Churl (Department of Psychiatry and Institute of Human Behavioral Medicine, Seoul National University College of Medicine)
  • 신민섭 (서울대학교 의과대학 정신과학교실 및 서울대학병원 인간행동의학 연구소) ;
  • 김현미 (어린이병원 소아청소년 정신과) ;
  • 온싱글 (어린이병원 소아청소년 정신과) ;
  • 황준원 (서울대학교 의과대학 정신과학교실 및 서울대학병원 인간행동의학 연구소) ;
  • 김붕년 (서울대학교 의과대학 정신과학교실 및 서울대학병원 인간행동의학 연구소) ;
  • 조수철 (서울대학교 의과대학 정신과학교실 및 서울대학병원 인간행동의학 연구소)
  • Published : 2006.09.01

Abstract

Objectives : This study was conducted to investigate the deficits of executive function in children with ADHD, Asperger's Disorder(AD), and teaming disorder (LD), and to identify the differential characteristics of executive function deficits among three groups. Methods : The clinical group consisted of 46 children between the ages of 7 and 15 (16 ADHD, 16 LD, 14 AD). Neuropsychological tests for measuring cognitive function, attention and executive function were individually administered to children, and their performance scores were calculated based on the age norm for each test. Results : There was no significant difference in FSIQ, VIQ, and PIQ among the three groups. However, the AD group tended to show higher scores on the subtests of Information, Vocabulary and Digit Span, and lower score on Comprehension subtest than the ADHD and LD groups, while the LD group tended to show the lowest scores on the Information and Vocabulary subtests. On ADS, the ADHD group showed the highest omission and commission errors. All groups showed poor performances belonging to below 25 percentile ranks on executive function tests when compared to the age norms of normative group. The number of completed category on WCST was the smallest in the ADHD group, while the working memory score was the lowest in the LD group. Conclusion : These results suggest that ADHD, LD, and AD children have executive function deficit in common. However, the specific deficit areas in executive function are different for each group.

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