英文摘要 |
Rationale/Purpose: Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) is a common psychiatric disorder characterized by cross-situational inattention, hyperactivity, and impulsivity. Although ADHD is often diagnosed in childhood, many symptoms may continue into adulthood. These symptoms may cause the patients to have difficulty in social interactions or in their academic or professional lives. Executive function is a top-down process involving inhibitory control, working memory, and cognitive flexibility. These core abilities are the basis for higher-order executive functions such as reasoning, problem solving, and planning. The core executive functions are related to ADHD patients’ inability to persist in their behavior and to inhibit their potential responses, and such deficits eventually affect their working memory and self-regulation. Thus, research indicates that executive function deficits are the cognitive vulnerability factors that cause the symptoms of insufficient attention, hyperactivity, and impulsivity. When these executive function deficits continue into adulthood, they can lead to further impairment throughout ADHD patients’ lives. In addition, executive function deficits can also lead to insufficient social skills and rejection by peers because of the patients’ difficulties in recognizing social information. Executive function deficits are related to social cognition, the core of which is theory of mind (ToM). Poor ToM ability makes it difficult for individuals to infer other people's thoughts, feelings, and motivations in interpersonal interactions, and such difficulties will in turn affect their interpersonal relationships and ultimately lead to social and professional dysfunction in individuals with ADHD. From the developmental perspective, some researchers also believe that ToM is an ability that can only be acquired after executive function matures. Though some researchers have begun to explore the relationships among ADHD symptoms, executive function and ToM, most studies to date have focused on children and adolescents, despite executive function deficit often continuing into adulthood. That is, there is still a lack of empirical research confirming the relationship between executive function and ADHD symptoms in adulthood. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to examine whether the executive function of college students can predict symptoms of ADHD and ToM ability, and also whether the influence of executive function on ToM is mediated by ADHD symptoms. Moreover, in the past, measures of executive function have also been limited to standardized tests. To improve the ecological validity of this study, self-reported inventories were also included. |