The ability to inhibit unwanted actions is a heritable executive function that may confer risk to disorders such as attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). Converging evidence from pharmacology and cognitive neuroscience suggests that response inhibition is instantiated within frontostriatal circuits of the brain with patterns of activity that are modulated by the catecholamines dopamine and noradrenaline. A total of 405 healthy adult participants performed the stop-signal task, a paradigmatic measure of response inhibition that yields an index of the latency of inhibition, termed the stop-signal reaction time (SSRT). Using this phenotype, we tested for genetic association, performing high-density single-nucleotide polymorphism map...
Response inhibition refers to the suppression of inappropriate or irrelevant responses. It has a cen...
Efficient avoidance of actions that have been rendered inappropriate or maladaptive by altered envir...
The DAT1 gene codes for the dopamine transporter, which clears dopamine from the synaptic cleft, and...
The ability to inhibit unwanted actions is a heritable executive function that may confer risk to di...
Background. Impairment of response inhibition has been implicated in attention-deficit/hyperactivity...
Failures of inhibitory control can severely affect everyday life in healthy individuals and represen...
Background Dopamine is believed to be a key neurotransmitter in the development of attention-deficit...
Functional genetic polymorphisms in the brain dopamine (DA) system have been suggested to underlie i...
Background Dopamine is believed to be a key neurotransmitter in the development of attention-deficit...
The ability to inhibit a prepared emotional or motor action is difficult but critical to everyday fu...
OBJECTIVE: The dopamine transporter (DAT1) gene has been implicated in attention-deficit/hyperactivi...
The attentional blink (AB)—a deficit in reporting the second of two target stimuli presented in clos...
Executive control processes, such as sustained attention, response inhibition, and error monitoring,...
Objectives. Deficits in response inhibition have been associated with attention-deficit/hyperactivit...
Response inhibition refers to the suppression of inappropriate or irrelevant responses. It has a cen...
Efficient avoidance of actions that have been rendered inappropriate or maladaptive by altered envir...
The DAT1 gene codes for the dopamine transporter, which clears dopamine from the synaptic cleft, and...
The ability to inhibit unwanted actions is a heritable executive function that may confer risk to di...
Background. Impairment of response inhibition has been implicated in attention-deficit/hyperactivity...
Failures of inhibitory control can severely affect everyday life in healthy individuals and represen...
Background Dopamine is believed to be a key neurotransmitter in the development of attention-deficit...
Functional genetic polymorphisms in the brain dopamine (DA) system have been suggested to underlie i...
Background Dopamine is believed to be a key neurotransmitter in the development of attention-deficit...
The ability to inhibit a prepared emotional or motor action is difficult but critical to everyday fu...
OBJECTIVE: The dopamine transporter (DAT1) gene has been implicated in attention-deficit/hyperactivi...
The attentional blink (AB)—a deficit in reporting the second of two target stimuli presented in clos...
Executive control processes, such as sustained attention, response inhibition, and error monitoring,...
Objectives. Deficits in response inhibition have been associated with attention-deficit/hyperactivit...
Response inhibition refers to the suppression of inappropriate or irrelevant responses. It has a cen...
Efficient avoidance of actions that have been rendered inappropriate or maladaptive by altered envir...
The DAT1 gene codes for the dopamine transporter, which clears dopamine from the synaptic cleft, and...