ADHD Clinical Trial
Official title:
Risk Perception in Adults With Attention Deficit and Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD)
People with ADHD often engage in risky behaviors, such as dangerous driving, substance abuse and gambling. Current behavioral economy theories differentiate between risk perception and risk attitude. This study aims to measure both risk taking and risk perception in adults with and without ADHD. It is hypothesized that people with ADHD show decreased risk perception, accounting for their risky behavior. In contrast, it is hypothesized that people with ADHD do not show increased risk attitude, namely, they are not risk seeking.
INTRODUCTION:
People with ADHD are found to be engaged in risky behavior and tend to take risks such as
dangers driving, substance abuse, gambling and more. These tendencies are in line with
findings of poor decision making in individuals with ADHD. Even though none of the existing
theories of ADHD manage to explain the full spectrum of decision making among ADHD, yet this
population interpreted as risk seekers regardless causative correlation that link the
disorder to risk taking behavior. Studies regarding decision making under uncertainty have
uncovered common patterns of behavior that are inconsistent with the grasp that individuals
with ADHD are risk seekers. First, studies that used gambling tasks showed that subjects
with ADHD bet on smaller wages than non ADHD subjects. Second, when subjects with ADHD
confronted with risky options that showed similarity in its expected value or that the
expected value was beneficial compared to the safe one, they did not choose the risky
options. Surprisingly, when the risky options did not carry any gain or benefit they tend to
choose the risky options upon the beneficial or safer ones. Third, subjects with ADHD who
preformed explicit pure risk seeking tasks under two conditions, with and without feedback,
differ from control group only in the with feedback condition and were conservative in
choosing risky alternatives. All of the above questions upon the risk perception of people
with ADHD in more skeptical light and is being researched in this study in a direct and more
comprehensive way.
METHODS:
Participants:
Two hundred adults with and with out ADHD will be recruited through addressing to
undergraduate students at the Hebrew University and Talpiot Collage in Israel, who will be
enrolled in special education course for teachers, and through addressing work colleagues.
All participants will complete the following questionnaire:
ADHD Adult Self Report Scale (ASRS-v1.1) in order to measure the severity of ADHD symptoms.
Domain-specific Risk-Taking (DOSPERT): The subjects will be asked to complete a
paper-and-pencil questionnaire in groups of 5-10 individuals or in private.of the DOSPERT
questionnaire consisted of a total set of 30 items assessing 3 scales (risk taking, risk
perception and expected benefits) in five domains of risk: financial, health/safety,
recreational, ethics, and social, 6 items in each domain. The set of 30 items was presented
three times in counterbalanced order.
The Hebrew version of the DOSPERT scale was developed for this study using the method of
back-translation. Internal consistency for the 3 measures was good. Cronbach's alpha was
0.85, 0.83 and 0.86, for Risk Taking, Risk Perception and Expected Benefit perception,
respectively.
Hypothesis:
We predict that: (a) higher level of ADHD symptoms will be associated with higher risk
taking ; (b) lower risk perception and higher benefit perception will be associated with
higher risk taking ; (c) higher level of ADHD symptoms will be associated with lower risk
perception and higher benefit perception ; (d) risk and benefit perceptions will mediate the
relation between level of ADHD symptoms and risk taking.
Analysis:
Three measures will be analyzed: Risk Taking (defined as the willingness to engage in a
risky activity as a function of its perceived riskiness), Risk Perception (defined as the
reported level of risk taking), and Expected Benefits (define as the benefit responders
expect to obtain from engaging in each risky behavior). Correlations with the ASRS scores
will be examined. A mediation analysis will be conducted in order to examine the role of
risk and benefit perception as potential mediator of ADHD-related risk taking.
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Observational Model: Case Control, Time Perspective: Cross-Sectional
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