The reverse congruency effect elicited by eye-gaze as a function of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder symptoms
Metadata
Show full item recordEditorial
Frontiers Media
Materia
social attention eye-gaze ADHD
Date
2024-06-14Referencia bibliográfica
Chacón Gandía, J.A. & Ponce, R. & Marotta, A. Front. Psychol. 15:1377379. [ience Volume 15 - 2024 [https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1377379]
Sponsorship
Grant PID2022-143054NB-I00 funded by MICIU/AEI /10.13039/501100011033 and by ERDF, EUAbstract
Individuals diagnosed with attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) have
been found to have impairments in multiple aspects of social cognition, thus
including the attentional processing of socially relevant stimuli such as eye-gaze.
However, to date, it remains unclear whether only the social-specific but not
the domain-general directional components, elicited by eye-gaze are affected
by ADHD symptomatology. To address this issue, the present study aimed to
investigate the impact of ADHD-like traits on the social-specific attentional
processing of eye-gaze. To this purpose, we conducted an online experiment
with a sample of 140 healthy undergraduate participants who completed two selfreported
questionnaires designed to assess ADHD-like traits, and a social variant
of an interference spatial task known to effectively isolate the social-specific
component of eye-gaze. To make our research plan transparent, our hypotheses,
together with the plans of analyses, were registered before data exploration.
Results showed that while the social-specific component of eye-gaze was evident
in the sample, no significant correlation was found between this component and
the measured ADHD-like traits. These results appear to contradict the intuition
that the attentional processing of the social-specific components of eye-gaze
may be impaired by ADHD symptomatology. However, further research involving
children and clinical populations is needed in order to clarify this matter.