The SAAND Study: Attention and arousal regulation in neurodevelopmental disorders

Last updated 15 December 2023
SAAND Study

The SAAND Study

Paying attention to the world and being able to direct attention toward the right sources of information, are complex but very important abilities that develop very early during life, and are likely to be impaired in individuals with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) and Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorders (ADHD). The SAAND study research group, composed of Dr Maddie Groom, Dr Danielle Ropar, Prof Chris Hollis, Iti Arora and Alessio Bellato (University of Nottingham), is investigating these mechanisms in children with ASD and ADHD. We hope that this research will have implications for clinical settings, for example by improving the diagnostic process and leading to new interventions for children with these neurodevelopmental conditions, as well as increasing knowledge about typical and atypical development of attention during childhood. Further, we would like to develop an international network of researchers working with these specific techniques, with the communal aim of improving our understanding about these conditions and, indirectly, the lives of children with ASD, ADHD, and their families.

These two neurodevelopmental conditions, taken together, impact the everyday life of at least 1% of population (American Psychiatric Association, 2013). Few of these children present “pure” symptoms of just one disorder; most show co-occurring symptoms of the other condition as well (Leitner, 2014; Groom et al., 2017; Rommelse et al., 2017). For this reason, we decided to focus on mechanisms involved in both ASD and ADHD, to identify mechanisms that underpin each condition and can help explain why they co-occur so often.

SAAND Study - Difficulties in attention and arousal regulation may be shared atypicalities in Autism Spectrum Disorder and ADHD
Difficulties in attention and arousal regulation may be shared atypicalities in Autism Spectrum Disorder and ADHD

Specifically, we are studying several aspects of attention including arousal regulation, defined as the ability to maintain an optimal state of attention that can be flexibly adapted to suit the environment. Recent findings, in fact, indicate that abnormalities in these mechanisms are likely to be present in both ASD and ADHD. Also, these difficulties may emerge even before the identification of behavioural symptoms and have repercussions on higher-level cognitive and social abilities (Keehn et al., 2013; de Klerk et al., 2014; Johnson et al., 2015). For these reasons, the focus of my PhD project, part of the SAAND study (School of Medicine; University of Nottingham), will be on enhancing understanding of how attentional and arousal regulation processes develop during childhood, and how they interact and are impaired in these disorders. Further, we don’t know yet if difficulties in these domains are shared by ADHD and ASD children, or if they are specific to just one condition.

SAAND Study - We are studying children’s ability to interact with social and non-social items, through eye-tracking and EEG
We are studying children’s ability to interact with social and non-social items, through eye-tracking and EEG

Children will come to our lab and perform some computerised activities designed to measure what draws their attention, how they direct attention to extract information from their environment, while autonomic (pupil dilation, heart rate), electrophysiological (EEG) and oculomotor measures will be collected. Specifically, we will record visual behaviour using an eye-tracking system, while children perform these assessments, allowing us to measure the trajectory and the speed of eye movements, to infer how they direct and focus attention. Further, collecting brain activity measures through EEG will provide important information about how the brain is functioning to facilitate attention and information processing during the tasks. From this project, we expect to find evidence of the interaction between attentional abilities and arousal regulation difficulties in children with ADHD or ASD, with more deficits in regulating arousal related to more difficulties in controlling attention.

We have just started recruitment of children with a diagnosis of ASD, ADHD or comorbid ASD & ADHD, but also of typically developing children, so we invite you to contact us, in case you are interested in participating in our study, or to share this blog with someone who may be interested.

SAAND Study - We have just start recruitment, but we hope that future results will have direct and indirect impact on life of children with ASD and ADHD
We have just start recruitment, but we hope that future results will have direct and indirect impact on life of children with ASD and ADHD

 

Conflicts of interest

The author declares that they do have a conflict of interest, since the author is involved in this study and will use data collected from this study towards his PhD project. The views expressed here are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of the Association for Child and Adolescent Mental Health.

Links

American Psychiatric Association (2013). Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders: DSM-5.

de Klerk, C. C. J. M., Gliga, T., Charman, T. & Johnson, M. H., (2014). Face engagement during infancy predicts later face recognition ability in younger siblings of children with autism. Developmental Science, 17(4): 596-611.

Groom, M. J., Kochhar, P., Hamilton, A., Liddle, E. B., Simeou, M. & Hollis, C. (2017). Atypical Processing of Gaze Cues and Faces Explains Comorbidity between Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) and Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD). J Autism Dev Disord, 47(5):1496-1509.

Johnson, M. H., Gliga, T., Jones, E. & Charman, T. (2015). Annual Research Review: Infant development, autism, and ADHD – early pathways to emerging disorders. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 56(3): 228-247.

Keehn, B., Müller, R. A. & Townsend, J. (2013). Atypical attentional networks and the emergence of autism. Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews, 37(2): 164-183.

Leitner, Y. (2014). The co-occurrence of autism and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder in children – what do we know? Front Hum Neurosci, 8(268).

Rommelse, N., Buitelaar, J. K. & Hartman, C. A. (2017). Structural brain imaging correlates of ASD and ADHD across the lifespan: a hypothesis-generating review on developmental ASD–ADHD subtypes. Journal of Neural Transmission, 124(2): 259-271.

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Alessio Bellato is a PhD student and Teaching Assistant at the University of Nottingham (School of Medicine, University of Nottingham) and a psychologist (Italian Register of Psychologist) with interest in neurodevelopmental disorders, visual attention and the use of technology in psychology and psychiatry. Alessio.Bellato@nottingham.ac.uk Disclaimer: This is an independent blog and ACAMH may not necessarily hold the same views.

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