Riccio Cynthia A, Wolfe Monica E, Romine Cassandra, Davis Brandon, Sullivan Jeremy R
Department of Educational Psychology, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77843-4225, USA.
Arch Clin Neuropsychol. 2004 Aug;19(5):661-71. doi: 10.1016/j.acn.2003.09.001.
Executive function refers to a variety of behaviors and abilities related to planning and strategy use, as well as the maintenance of attention and behavior in the pursuit of some goal; these behaviors are generally deficient in individuals with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD). The Tower of London (TOL) is one task used in the assessment of executive function. For adults with ADHD, there is minimal research on the extent to which they demonstrate impaired performance on tower tasks. With a sample of 102 individuals between the ages of 16 and 33 years, the extent to which performance on the TOL-Drexel Edition (TOL(DX)) was related to performance on other measures of executive function and diagnostic grouping was investigated. Results indicated that TOL(DX) variables are not correlated significantly with age or Global Assessment of Functioning (GAF). Of the TOL(DX) variables, only Rule Violations correlated with multiple other executive function variables. Rule Violations correlated minimally, but significantly, with cognitive ability, perceptual skills, Matrix Reasoning, Processing Speed, and immediate memory. As might be expected, Processing Speed also significantly correlated with Total Time and Time Violations. Notably, scores on the TOL(DX) did not correlate significantly with behavioral self-report; no between-group (ADHD, Clinical Control, No Diagnosis) differences emerged for any of the TOL(DX) variables. Further, with this sample, mean scores across the TOL(DX) variables were well within the average range. Taken together, these results suggest that while the TOL(DX) measures aspects of ability not tapped by other measures, and may therefore provide additional information on individual functioning, results should not be interpreted as indicative of the presence or absence of a disorder.
执行功能是指与计划和策略运用相关的多种行为和能力,以及在追求某个目标时保持注意力和行为的能力;这些行为在注意力缺陷多动障碍(ADHD)患者中通常存在缺陷。伦敦塔任务(TOL)是用于评估执行功能的一项任务。对于患有ADHD的成年人,关于他们在塔任务上表现受损程度的研究极少。以102名年龄在16至33岁之间的个体为样本,研究了伦敦塔德雷克塞尔版(TOL(DX))任务的表现与其他执行功能测量指标及诊断分组之间的关系。结果表明,TOL(DX)变量与年龄或功能总体评估(GAF)无显著相关性。在TOL(DX)变量中,只有违反规则次数与其他多个执行功能变量相关。违反规则次数与认知能力、感知技能、矩阵推理、处理速度和即时记忆的相关性最小但显著。正如预期的那样,处理速度也与总时间和违反时间显著相关。值得注意的是,TOL(DX)的得分与行为自我报告无显著相关性;任何TOL(DX)变量在组间(ADHD组、临床对照组、无诊断组)均未出现差异。此外,对于这个样本,TOL(DX)变量的平均得分均处于平均范围内。综上所述,这些结果表明,虽然TOL(DX)测量了其他测量指标未涉及的能力方面,因此可能提供有关个体功能的额外信息,但结果不应被解释为表明某种障碍的存在或不存在。