In the present study it was investigated whether the
smaller P3s in attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder
(ADHD) children are caused by a shortage of capacity underlying
P3 processes or whether they are due to a capacity allocation
problem. Also, effects of methylphenidate on these processes
were investigated. Performance and event-related potentials
(ERPs) of 14 ADHD and 14 control children were measured
using an irrelevant-probe technique. Three types of task
irrelevant visual probes (standards, deviants, and novels)
were presented against the background of two visual tasks
that varied in task difficulty. The parietal P3 wave was
measured in response to task stimuli and probes. ADHD subjects
made significantly fewer correct detections than normal
controls in both the easy and the hard tasks. Controls
showed an enhanced P3 to task-relevant stimuli in the hard
task, whereas ADHD children did not. Probe (novel) P3 amplitudes
decreased from the easy to the hard task to the same extent
in both groups. Methylphenidate enhanced the percentage
of correct responses and task P3 amplitudes in both the
easy and the hard task but probe P3 amplitudes were not
influenced by methylphenidate. It was concluded that ADHD
children do not suffer from a shortage in attentional capacity;
rather, the evidence is in favor of a problem with capacity
allocation. Furthermore, methylphenidate had enhancing
effects on performance and ERPs, but did not improve the
capacity-allocation deficit.