The study aims to explore the effectiveness of working memory training and social emotional training for young children with ADHD in Hong Kong. This study will contribute to the current understanding of the alternative treatments for ADHD, and hopefully help to mobilize more resources to be dedicated to the support of children with ADHD. The programme includes the following components: Children participating in this study will be randomly allocated into experimental group - recieving working memory training, active control group - receiving social-emotional training, and waitlist control group. All participants will complete a 5-week online training using a digital device at home, three times a week, each training session lasts for about 15 minutes. Moreover, children's cognitive abilities and academic performance will be assessed prior to the intervention, and immediately after the 5-week training. Each assessment session lasts for about 45 minutes. Parents will also be asked to fill out a questionnaire on children's behaviours at home and school prior to and after the 5-week program. It takes about no more than 10 minutes. All assessments will be conducted at the laboratory at the University of Hong Kong. Children's working memory, time perception, ADHD symptoms, and early academic performance will be measured before and after training, and the between-group performance will be compared to examine the training effects.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
79
Participants in the WM group will be receiving two types of WM training tasks (two mini-games) in each session. Half of the training time will be spent on playing a game that requires visual-spatial WM, and the other half of the training time will be spent on playing a game that demands verbal WM. In both the games, the participant is asked to remember the pictures or audios (numbers) presented, and then recall them and select them on the screen.
Participants in the SE group will be also receiving two types of SE training tasks in each session, to match with the ones in the WM training. There are two mini-games for training. To match with the spatial-visual WM training, participants in the SE group will be asked to first look at a picture that depicts a daily social scenario (i.e., a child who fell down and hurt himself), and then to choose an emotion that the child in the picture may feel from four options of facial emotions displayed on the screen. The other mini-game, with the aim to match with the auditory WM training, will first tell a short story of a social scenario (i.e. "David accidentally fell down and got hurt), and then will ask the child to choose the emotion that the character in the story may feel from the four options displayed on the screen. Each mini game lasts for about 7 minutes in each training session.
University of Hong Kong
Hong Kong, Hong Kong
verbal working memory (CMS- digit span)
The number subtest from the Children Memory Scale (Cohen, 1997) was used to measure children's verbal working memory. The Numbers subtest included both digit span forward and backward tasks, for which the children were asked to recall digit sequences presented verbally in increasing length, either in the same order for Numbers Forward or in the reverse order for Numbers Backward. The total score was the sum of the scores for the forward and backward tasks.The raw score scale ranges from 0 to 30. A higher score indicates a better verbal working memory.
Time frame: 5 weeks, immediately after the intervention
verbal working memory(CMS-digit span)
The number subtest from the Children Memory Scale (Cohen, 1997) was used to measure children's verbal working memory. The Numbers subtest included both digit span forward and backward tasks, for which the children were asked to recall digit sequences presented verbally in increasing length, either in the same order for Numbers Forward or in the reverse order for Numbers Backward. The total score was the sum of the scores for the forward and backward tasks.The raw score scale ranges from 0 to 30. A higher score indicates a better verbal working memory.
Time frame: before the intervention
non-verbal working memory(CMS - picture location)
The picture location subtest from the Children Memory Scale (Cohen, 1997) was used to test participants' non-verbal working memory. Children were asked to look at pictures on a page for 2 seconds and to recall and indicate the pictures' locations by putting chips on the right places that matched the positions of the pictures showed. A score was given when the participant successfully matched the correct position of a picture.The raw score scale ranges from 0 to 30. A higher score indicates a better nonverbal working memory.
Time frame: 5 weeks, immediately after the intervention
nonverbal working memory(CMS - picture location)
The picture location subtest from the Children Memory Scale (Cohen, 1997) was used to test participants' non-verbal working memory. Children were asked to look at pictures on a page for 2 seconds and to recall and indicate the pictures' locations by putting chips on the right places that matched the positions of the pictures showed. A score was given when the participant successfully matched the correct position of a picture. The raw score scale ranges from 0 to 30. A higher score indicates a better nonverbal working memory.
Time frame: before the intervention
Time perception: time discrimination
A computerized task that examined participants' abilities in discriminating discrepancy between different durations of time (Gooch et al., 2011). A threealternative forced-choice (oddball) paradigm was used. On each trial, the child heard three 1000Hz tones, two of which were 1200ms long and a roving target which was at a different length (400ms, 700ms, and 1100ms - each repeated nine times). The child was required to choose which interval was "different" from the other two. Six easy trials of 100ms comparing with 1200ms were incorporated randomly during the experiment to evaluate the attention level of the participants.
Time frame: before the intervention
Time perception: time discrimination
A computerized task that examined participants' abilities in discriminating discrepancy between different durations of time (Gooch et al., 2011). A threealternative forced-choice (oddball) paradigm was used. On each trial, the child heard three 1000Hz tones, two of which were 1200ms long and a roving target which was at a different length (400ms, 700ms, and 1100ms - each repeated nine times). The child was required to choose which interval was "different" from the other two. Six easy trials of 100ms comparing with 1200ms were incorporated randomly during the experiment to evaluate the attention level of the participants.
Time frame: 5 weeks, immediately after the intervention
Time perception: time reproduction
A computerized lightbulb game was used to measure participants' abilities in recognizing and producing a designated period. The task was adapted from a similar task developed by Gooch and colleagues (2011). It was presented in a computer-game-like format where the child was asked to look at the red lightbulb that would appear on the screen and remember how long it had been left on (3s, 5s, 6s, 9s, 12s, and 15s). After, the child was asked to reproduce for the same length of duration. Immediately following this presentation the screen went blank and the participant was asked to "turn the yellow lightbulb on and leave it on" (use "ENTER" to turn on) for the same amount of time as it had been for the red lightbulb, and then use "SPACE" to turn off the light. Each target duration is presented twice in a randomized order for a total of 12 trials.
Time frame: before the intervention
Time perception: time reproduction
A computerized lightbulb game was used to measure participants' abilities in recognizing and producing a designated period. The task was adapted from a similar task developed by Gooch and colleagues (2011). It was presented in a computer-game-like format where the child was asked to look at the red lightbulb that would appear on the screen and remember how long it had been left on (3s, 5s, 6s, 9s, 12s, and 15s). After, the child was asked to reproduce for the same length of duration. Immediately following this presentation the screen went blank and the participant was asked to "turn the yellow lightbulb on and leave it on" (use "ENTER" to turn on) for the same amount of time as it had been for the red lightbulb, and then use "SPACE" to turn off the light. Each target duration is presented twice in a randomized order for a total of 12 trials.
Time frame: 5 weeks, immediately after the intervention
Time perception: time production
Subjects were required to indicate the end of 3, 5, 12, and 20-s intervals (each produced twice) by saying "STOP" to indicate the end of the temporal duration.
Time frame: before the intervention
Time perception: time production
Subjects were required to indicate the end of 3, 5, 12, and 20-s intervals (each produced twice) by saying "STOP" to indicate the end of the temporal duration.
Time frame: 5 weeks, immediately after the intervention
Emotion situation knowledge measures.
This task was developed by Garner et al. (1994) to measure children's ability to infer emotions from situational cues, and similar tasks have been used among preschoolers (Beaudoin et al. 2020; Gallant et al. 2020). Social situations commonly encountered by children were presented in pictures, with the facial expressions of the target characters left out (i.e., blank faces were shown). The children were asked to identify the feeling of the target character by either naming the emotion or pointing to the corresponding facial expression out of four options (happy, sad, angry, and afraid) given on the stimulus sheet. There were two sample items followed by 13 test items.
Time frame: before the intervention
Emotion situation knowledge measures.
This task was developed by Garner et al. (1994) to measure children's ability to infer emotions from situational cues, and similar tasks have been used among preschoolers (Beaudoin et al. 2020; Gallant et al. 2020). Social situations commonly encountered by children were presented in pictures, with the facial expressions of the target characters left out (i.e., blank faces were shown). The children were asked to identify the feeling of the target character by either naming the emotion or pointing to the corresponding facial expression out of four options (happy, sad, angry, and afraid) given on the stimulus sheet. There were two sample items followed by 13 test items.
Time frame: 5 weeks, immediately after the intervention
Theory of mind (ToM)
Children's ToM will be measured by the ToM scale developed by Wellman and Liu (2004). The seven-item scale was designed for the experimental to adminster in order according to the difficulty of the task, with the Diverse Desire task as the easiest, and the Real-Apparent Emotion task as the most difficult. Participants will receive one point for each task passed successfully(range: 0-7). A higher score indicates a better ability of ToM.
Time frame: before intervention
Theory of mind (ToM)
Children's ToM will be measured by the ToM scale developed by Wellman and Liu (2004). The seven-item scale was designed for the experimental to adminster in order according to the difficulty of the task, with the Diverse Desire task as the easiest, and the Real-Apparent Emotion task as the most difficult. Participants will receive one point for each task passed successfully (range: 0-7).A higher score indicates a better ability of ToM.
Time frame: 5 weeks, immediately after the intervention
Working Memory Behavioural Manisfetation
The Working Memory Subscale from the BRIEF-P is used to measure participants' daily behavioural manifestation of working memory reported by parents. The minimum raw score is 0 and maximum score is 17. A higher score indicates more severe deficits in working memory.
Time frame: 5 weeks, immediately after the intervention
Working Memory Behavioural Manisfetation
The Working Memory Subscale from the BRIEF-P is used to measure participants' daily behavioural manifestation of working memory reported by parents. The minimum raw score is 0 and maximum score is 17. A higher score indicates more severe deficits in working memory.
Time frame: before the intervention
ADHD symptoms(SNAP-IV)
Swanson, Nolan and Pelham Parent Rating Scale (26 items, SNAP-IV; Chinese version; Gau et al., 2008) will be used to reflect the symptom severity of ADHD behaviors. The minimum raw score is 0 and maximum is 26. The higher score indicates a higher symptomatic presentation of ADHD behaviours.
Time frame: before the intervention
ADHD symptoms(SNAP-IV)
Swanson, Nolan and Pelham Parent Rating Scale (26 items, SNAP-IV; Chinese version; Gau et al., 2008) will be used to reflect the symptom severity of ADHD behaviors. The minimum raw score is 0 and maximum is 26. The higher score indicates a higher symptomatic presentation of ADHD behaviours.
Time frame: 5 weeks, immediately after the intervention
Academic measures - Chinese word reading
The Hong Kong Reading Ability Screening Test for Preschool Children (RAST-K) will be used to measure participants' Chinese word reading ability. The maximum score is 55 and the minimum is 0. The higher score indicates a better Chinese word reading ability.
Time frame: before the intervention
Academic measures - Chinese word reading
The Hong Kong Reading Ability Screening Test for Preschool Children (RAST-K) will be used to measure participants' Chinese word reading ability. The maximum score is 55 and the minimum is 0. The higher score indicates a better Chinese word reading ability.
Time frame: 5 weeks, immediately after the intervention
Academic measures - English word reading
An adapted English word reading assessment designed by the experimenters will be implemented to measure participants' English word reading ability. The maximum score is 55, and the minimum score is 0. A higher score indicates a higher ability of English word reading.
Time frame: before the intervention
Academic measures - English word reading
An adapted English word reading assessment designed by the experimenters will be implemented to measure participants' English word reading ability. The maximum score is 55, and the minimum score is 0. A higher score indicates a higher ability of English word reading.
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Time frame: 5 weeks, immediately after the intervention
Academic measures - Numeration
The numeration subscale from Keymath-3 Diagnostic Assessment (Connolly, 2014) will be used to measure their number skills. The maximum score is 49 and the minimum score is 0. A higher score indicates a higher ability in numeration.
Time frame: before the intervention
Academic measures - Numeration
The numeration subscale from Keymath-3 Diagnostic Assessment (Connolly, 2014) will be used to measure their number skills. The maximum score is 49 and the minimum score is 0. A higher score indicates a higher ability in numeration.
Time frame: 5 weeks, immediately after the intervention