Contribution of organizational strategy to verbal learning and memory in adults with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder.
Author: Roth RM, Wishart HA, Flashman LA, Riordan HJ, Huey L, Saykin AJ.
Source:
Neuropsychology, 18(1), 78.
Statistical mediation modeling was used to test the hypothesis that poor use of a
semantic organizational strategy contributes to verbal learning and memory
deficits in adults with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD).
Comparison of 28 adults with ADHD and 34 healthy controls revealed lower
performance by the ADHD group on tests of verbal learning and memory, sustained
attention, and use of semantic organization during encoding. Mediation modeling
indicated that state anxiety, but not semantic organization, significantly
contributed to the prediction of both learning and delayed recall in the ADHD
group. The pattern of findings suggests that decreased verbal learning and memory
in adult ADHD is due in part to situational anxiety and not to poor use of
organizational strategies during encoding.