Many investigators have attempted to show that using intensive cognitive training to increase Attention-
Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) patients’ capacity to store information within WM might also reduce
symptom severity or functional impairment. Those studies were based on strong evidence for WM behavioral
and neural dysfunction in ADHD, a widely-held belief that WM-related brain dysfunction is etiologically
significant, and arguments that impaired WM contributes to the maintenance of the disorder. But despite
promising early evidence for WM storage training potential efficacy, a decade of equivocal and negative outcomes
from several well-designed randomized clinical trials have left investigators wondering why meaningful,
replicable ADHD clinical improvements are not always achieved when WM storage capacity is reliably enhanced.
Because few investigators want to mistakenly abandon such a promising intervention premise, there is a search
for novel working memory-related treatment targets that focus on something other than simple WM storage
capacity. In this R61/R33 proposal, we synthesize published findings and provide our own pilot neuroimaging
evidence to argue that a better WM training target might be brain regions that specifically underlie the executive
aspects of WM. Such executive working (EWM) memory operations represent patients’ ability to effectively use
the information represented in WM for behavioral and cognitive control. These abilities likely are more
meaningful to ADHD behavioral impairment than merely how large patients’ general WM storage capacity is.
An extensive theoretical framework supports that the ‘working’ part of WM involves a small handful of discrete
cognitive operations that flexibly manipulate information within WM, or stabilize WM representations in the
face of different types of environmental distraction. Dozens of prior fMRI studies reliably link the four primary
types of these EWM operations to activity within specific brain regions – the superior frontal sulcus and mid-
lateral prefrontal cortex. Converging evidence including our pilot evidence shows these regions function
abnormally in ADHD, predict ADHD symptom severity, and can be enhanced by practicing EWM tasks. NIMH’s
R61/R33 experimental therapeutics mechanism is ideal to learn if a typical 5-week, course of intensive training
that uses these EWM exercises can engage the proposed brain targets linked to both EWM ability and to ADHD
dysfunction. If this neuroscience-guided, initial 2-year R61 study phase achieves its milestones, a subsequent
R33 study phase will seek to replicate, and then show the relevance of target engagement to ADHD clinical
function. If both R61/R33 aims are achieved, a series of secondary analyses will re-examine the trial outcome
data. These efforts will inform the design of any subsequent preliminary efficacy study, facilitating a rapid
transition into larger-scale efficacy testing.