Is waiting for rewards good for you? No association between impulsive choice, psychopathology, and functional outcomes in a large cohort sample
Patricia P. Bado, Giovanni A. Salum, Luis A. Rohde, Ary Gadelha, Pedro M. Pan, Eurípedes C. Miguel, Gail Tripp, Emi Furukawa

TL;DR
The study found no link between preferring delayed rewards and better outcomes in children, including those with ADHD.
Contribution
It challenges the assumption that delay preference predicts positive outcomes in diverse psychiatric populations.
Findings
Children with ADHD and typically developing children performed similarly on the choice delay task.
Baseline delay preference did not predict psychiatric conditions or functional life outcomes.
Results question the validity of using delay tasks to assess long-term outcomes in diverse populations.
Abstract
A stronger preference for immediate rewards has been reported in individuals with ADHD and other disorders. However, the consistency of the associations between this preference and psychiatric conditions as well as functional outcomes have been questioned. Research on its association with longitudinal outcomes is scarce. The current study used data on a choice delay task (CDT) from a school‐based cohort of Brazilian children with those at higher risk for psychiatric disorders over‐sampled (n = 1917). The sample included typically developing children (n = 1379), those with ADHD (n = 213), and other disorders. The frequency of the trials where children chose a larger later reward versus a smaller sooner reward was compared for those with ADHD and typically developing children. Cross‐sectionally and longitudinally, the study also evaluated whether children's preference for larger delayed…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEating Disorders and Behaviors · Behavioral Health and Interventions · Obsessive-Compulsive Spectrum Disorders
