Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder and risk-taking: A three-level meta-analytic review of behavioral, self-report, and virtual reality metrics
Autor: | R. Matt Alderson, Delanie K. Roberts, Caitlin C. Bullard, Jessica L. Betancourt |
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Rok vydání: | 2021 |
Předmět: |
Adult
050103 clinical psychology Virtual reality 03 medical and health sciences Risk-Taking 0302 clinical medicine Rating scale medicine Humans Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder 0501 psychology and cognitive sciences Child Self report 05 social sciences Virtual Reality medicine.disease Moderation 030227 psychiatry Benchmarking Psychiatry and Mental health Clinical Psychology Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity Meta-analysis Self Report Metric (unit) Risk taking Psychology Cognitive psychology |
Zdroj: | Clinical Psychology Review. 87:102039 |
ISSN: | 0272-7358 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.cpr.2021.102039 |
Popis: | Meta-analytic methods were used to examine ADHD-related risk-taking in children and adults, and to compare the magnitude of risk taking across behavioral, self-report, and virtual reality metrics. Potential moderators of effect size heterogeneity were also examined via a three-level multi-level approach and a hybrid meta-analytic/systematic review approach. Aggregated effect sizes obtained from 56 behavioral-task studies (82 effect sizes; ADHDN = 2577; TDN = 2606), 51 self-report studies (130 effect sizes; ADHDN = 18,641; TDN = 113,163), and 8 virtual reality studies (16 effect sizes; ADHDN = 382; TDN = 436) suggest that children and adults with ADHD exhibit moderately more risk-taking compared to children and adults without the disorder. Notably, the aggregated effect size obtained from virtual reality simulations (Hedges', g = 0.43) was 30–40% larger than effect sizes obtained from self-report and behavioral task metrics (Hedges' g = 0.31 and 0.27), respectively. Suboptimal Decision Making was the only significant moderator identified via multi-level modeling; however, comparison of subgroup effect sizes revealed potential moderating effects of ADHD presentation and trial-by-trial feedback on behavioral tasks. Collectively, findings suggest that ADHD is reliably associated with small to moderate magnitude greater risk-taking behavior and virtual reality simulations appear be the most sensitive currently available metric. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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