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Child Neuropsychology
A Journal on Normal and Abnormal Development in Childhood and Adolescence
Volume 17, 2011 - Issue 5
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Original Articles

A comparison of working memory profiles in children with ADHD and DCD

Pages 483-494 | Received 12 Feb 2010, Accepted 24 Dec 2010, Published online: 21 Mar 2011
 

Abstract

The main objective of present study was to investigate whether the patterns of working memory performance differ as a function of attention and motor difficulties, and whether children with ADHD and DCD could be reliably discriminated on the basis of their memory deficits. A related aim was to investigate the link between their working memory profiles and academic attainment. Fifty children with ADHD-Combined, 55 children with DCD, and an age-matched group of 50 typically developing children with average working memory were assessed on standardized measures of working memory, IQ, and academic attainment (reading, spelling, comprehension, and math). The normal controls performed significantly better than both clinical groups on all working memory tests. Specific patterns emerged in the memory profile of the clinical groups: The children with DCD had a depressed performance in all working memory tests, with particularly low scores in visuospatial memory tasks; children with ADHD performed within age-expected levels in short-term memory but had a pervasive working memory deficit that impacted both verbal and visuospatial domains. The clinical groups could reliably be discriminated on the basis of their short-term memory scores. Their learning profiles were similar. It is possible that the working memory profiles of the children with ADHD and DCD are influenced by distinct underlying cognitive mechanisms, rather than a general neurodevelopmental delay. Despite these distinctive patterns of memory performance, both clinical groups performed similarly on academic attainments, suggesting that memory may underlie learning difficulties, independent of related clinical disorders.

Acknowledgments

This research was supported by a research grant awarded by the Economic and Social Research Council of Great Britain. The author wishes to thank Kathryn Temple, Joni Holmes, and Kerry Hilton for assistance in data collection.

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