Publication | Closed Access
Time-Response Analysis of the Effect of Stimulant Medication on the Learning Ability of Children Referred for Hyperactivity
206
Citations
15
References
1978
Year
NeuropsychologyPsychotropic MedicationPsychopharmacologyEducationBehavior AnalysisPsychologyHyperactive ChildrenSocial SciencesAdhdBehavioral Time-response InformationCognitive DevelopmentBehavioral IssueTime-response AnalysisAdaptive BehaviorChildren ReferredChild PsychologyCognitive ScienceBehavioral SciencesPsychoactive DrugPsychiatryBehavior-analytic AssessmentExperimental PsychologyLearning AbilityChild DevelopmentCognitive PerformanceAddictionPediatricsLearning TaskProcedural MemoryPsychopathology
This report introduces a method for obtaining behavioral time-response information for a short-acting psychotropic drug (methylphenidate [Ritalin]) that is widely used to treat behaviorally hyperactive children. We used a laboratory learning task to document that between one and two hours after the administration of a single dose of methylphenidate, the drug exerts its maximum effect on performance in a learning task in the laboratory. This effect on cognitive performance dissipates within the same day. This rapid and transient effect of methylphenidate makes it possible to classify patients in a single day into those who respond favorably and those who respond adversely to the drug in terms of its effect on cognitive behavior.
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