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@ARTICLE{Tamon:1034544,
      author       = {Tamon, Hiroki and Fujino, Junya and Itahashi, Takashi and
                      Frahm, Lennart and Parlatini, Valeria and Aoki, Yuta Y. and
                      Castellanos, Francisco Xavier and Eickhoff, Simon B. and
                      Cortese, Samuele},
      title        = {{S}hared and {S}pecific {N}eural {C}orrelates of
                      {A}ttention {D}eficit {H}yperactivity {D}isorder and
                      {A}utism {S}pectrum {D}isorder: {A} {M}eta-{A}nalysis of 243
                      {T}ask-{B}ased {F}unctional {MRI} {S}tudies},
      journal      = {The American journal of psychiatry},
      volume       = {181},
      number       = {6},
      issn         = {0002-953X},
      address      = {Stanford, Calif.},
      publisher    = {HighWire Press},
      reportid     = {FZJ-2024-07307},
      pages        = {541 - 552},
      year         = {2024},
      note         = {This work was partly supported by the Japan Society for the
                      Promotion of Science (grant 21K15719 to Dr. Aoki) and the
                      Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development (grant
                      JP18dm0307008). Dr. Eickhoff was supported by the European
                      Union’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Program
                      (grants 945539 [HBP SGA3] and 826421 [VBC]), the Deutsche
                      Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, SFB 1451; and IRTG 2150), and
                      NIH (grant R01MH074457). Dr. Cortese was supported by a
                      National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR)
                      Research Professorship (grant NIHR303122), by NIHR grants
                      NIHR203684, NIHR203035, NIHR130077, NIHR128472, and
                      RP-PG-0618-20003, and by European Research Executive Agency
                      grant 101095568-HORIZONHLTH-2022-DISEASE-07-03.},
      abstract     = {Objective:To investigate shared and specific neural
                      correlates of cognitive functions in attention deficit
                      hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and autism spectrum disorder
                      (ASD), the authors performed a comprehensive meta-analysis
                      and considered a balanced set of neuropsychological tasks
                      across the two disorders.Methods:A broad set of electronic
                      databases was searched up to December 4, 2022, for
                      task-based functional MRI studies investigating differences
                      between individuals with ADHD or ASD and typically
                      developing control subjects. Spatial coordinates of brain
                      loci differing significantly between case and control
                      subjects were extracted. To avoid potential diagnosis-driven
                      selection bias of cognitive tasks, the tasks were grouped
                      according to the Research Domain Criteria framework, and
                      stratified sampling was used to match cognitive component
                      profiles. Activation likelihood estimation was used for the
                      meta-analysis.Results:After screening 20,756 potentially
                      relevant references, a meta-analysis of 243 studies was
                      performed, which included 3,084 participants with ADHD (676
                      females), 2,654 participants with ASD (292 females), and
                      6,795 control subjects (1,909 females). ASD and ADHD showed
                      shared greater activations in the lingual and rectal gyri
                      and shared lower activations in regions including the middle
                      frontal gyrus, the parahippocampal gyrus, and the insula. By
                      contrast, there were ASD-specific greater and lower
                      activations in regions including the left middle temporal
                      gyrus and the left middle frontal gyrus, respectively, and
                      ADHD-specific greater and lower activations in the amygdala
                      and the global pallidus, respectively.Conclusions:Although
                      ASD and ADHD showed both shared and disorder-specific
                      standardized neural activations, disorder-specific
                      activations were more prominent than shared ones. Functional
                      brain differences between ADHD and ASD are more likely to
                      reflect diagnosis-related pathophysiology than bias from the
                      selection of specific neuropsychological tasks.},
      cin          = {INM-7},
      ddc          = {610},
      cid          = {I:(DE-Juel1)INM-7-20090406},
      pnm          = {5252 - Brain Dysfunction and Plasticity (POF4-525) / DFG
                      project G:(GEPRIS)431549029 - SFB 1451:
                      Schlüsselmechanismen normaler und krankheitsbedingt
                      gestörter motorischer Kontrolle (431549029)},
      pid          = {G:(DE-HGF)POF4-5252 / G:(GEPRIS)431549029},
      typ          = {PUB:(DE-HGF)16},
      pubmed       = {38685858},
      UT           = {WOS:001242243500013},
      doi          = {10.1176/appi.ajp.20230270},
      url          = {https://juser.fz-juelich.de/record/1034544},
}