The influence of state and trait anxiety on the achievement of a virtual reality continuous performance test in children and adolescents with adhd symptoms

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Abstract

The three types of presentations of ADHD often co-occur with other disorders, anxiety being one of the most prevalent. For this reason and because there are few studies that have examined the influence of anxiety on attentional activities, this study aims to determine how internalizing difficulties (anxiety levels) can influence performance in a virtual reality continuous performance test. The study used a non-probabilistic clinical sample comprising 68 boys (66%) and 35 girls (34%) aged between 6 and 16 (M = 12.24; SD = 2.45) who had been referred to clinical services for the evaluation of ADHD symptoms. Once informed consent was given, the children were administered the STAI-C scale and a virtual reality continuous performance test by expert researchers. Hierarchical regression models showed that only state anxiety demonstrated significant explanatory power over attentional variables. These findings confirm how important it is for children to feel relaxed when they undergo psychological evaluation tests, as otherwise the individual’s intervention design would be based on biased data. Similarly, the findings also suggested an effect of IQ in the interpretation of continuous performance scores.

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Areces, D., Rodríguez, C., García, T., Cueli, M., & González-Castro, P. (2021). The influence of state and trait anxiety on the achievement of a virtual reality continuous performance test in children and adolescents with adhd symptoms. Journal of Clinical Medicine, 10(12). https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm10122534

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