The consolidation of a motor skill in young adults with ADHD: Shorter practice can be better

Orly Fox, Avi Karni, Esther Adi-Japha

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    19 Scopus citations

    Abstract

    Practice on a given sequence of movements can lead to robust procedural memory (skill). In young adults, in addition to gains in performance accrued during practice, speed and accuracy can further improve overnight; the latter, delayed, 'offline', gains are thought to emerge when procedural memory consolidation processes are completed. A recent study suggested that female college students with ADHD show an atypical procedural memory consolidation phase, specifically, gaining speed but losing accuracy, overnight. Here, to test if this accuracy loss reflected a cost of overlong training in adults with ADHD, we compared the performance of female college students with (N= 16) and without (N= 16) ADHD, both groups given a shorter training protocol (80 rather than the standard 160 task repetitions). Speed and accuracy were recorded before training, immediately after, and at 24-h and 2 weeks post-training. The shortened practice session resulted in as robust within-session gains and additional overnight gains in speed at no costs in accuracy, in both groups. Moreover, individuals with ADHD showed as robust speed gains and retention as in the longer training session, but the costs in accuracy incurred in the latter were eliminated. The shortening of practice sessions may benefit motor skill acquisition in ADHD.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)135-144
    Number of pages10
    JournalResearch in Developmental Disabilities
    Volume51-52
    DOIs
    StatePublished - 1 Apr 2016

    Bibliographical note

    Publisher Copyright:
    © 2016 Elsevier Ltd.

    Funding

    The study was a part of the doctoral thesis of O.F. at the Department of Learning Disabilities, University of Haifa. The study was partially supported by an ERANET-NEURON grant to A.K.

    FundersFunder number
    ERANET-NEURON

      Keywords

      • ADHD
      • Motor learning
      • Procedural memory consolidation
      • Skill practice optimization
      • Speed-accuracy trade-off
      • Training session length

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