Author:
BECKER JAMES T.,SALTHOUSE TIMOTHY A.
Abstract
Individuals infected with the acquired immunodeficiency
syndrome (AIDS) are at risk for developing cognitive impairment.
The extent to which the impairment represents the results
of a single factor accounting for a wide degree of cognitive
dysfunction, or is the result of the combined effects of
multiple factors, has not been determined. In the present
study, we analyzed data from 134 patients with AIDS and
105 HIV− controls using a recently developed analytical
procedure. The results revealed that, by and large, the
test variables shared a significant amount of variance
related to disease status. Hence the AIDS-related influences
on cognition are shared and thus cannot be considered independent.
Two tests, Digit Symbol Substitution, and the primacy measure
of verbal free recall, had a direct relationship with the
group variable (AIDS vs. controls). These results
suggest that a single factor is sufficient to account for
a large proportion of the AIDS-related variance on a wide
variety of neuropsychological tests. (JINS, 1999,
5, 41–47.)
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Clinical Neurology,Clinical Psychology,General Neuroscience
Cited by
22 articles.
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