Author:
MURTHA SUSAN,CISMARU ROXANNA,WAECHTER RANDALL,CHERTKOW HOWARD
Abstract
Performance variability on neuropsychological measures is not
a unitary phenomenon, and different measures (consistency,
dispersion, diversity) evaluate separate elements of variability.
It has been suggested that increased variability may be a specific
attribute of frontal lobe pathology. This hypothesis was tested
in 2 matched groups of demented subjects, 8 with dementia of
the Alzheimer type (DAT), 5 with frontal lobe dementia (FLD),
compared with 10 elderly normal controls (ENC). A Stroop test
and Reaction Time measures were administered weekly for 5 weeks
to all subjects. Both measures contained three subtests varying
in degree of complexity. The results from the Stroop task indicated
that the FLD group showed significantly greater variability
on measures of consistency (fluctuations over time) and diversity
(between participant variability) regardless of the complexity
of the subtest. For the Reaction Time subtests, measures of
consistency and diversity showed significantly greater variability
in FLD, but were affected in a different pattern. Greater
variability in terms of consistency of performance was manifested
only in the more attentionally demanding of the Reaction Time
subtests (Choice Reaction Time, CRT). On the measure of diversity,
variable performance was found to be greater on the Simple Reaction
Time (SRT) subtest than on the more effortful CRT. Dispersion
(within participant variability) was only assessed on the reaction
time subtests. The results indicate no significant evidence
for an increase in dispersion for the FLD patients. The hypothesis
that variability will be increased in frontal lobe dementia
is thus confirmed, and the independence of the three forms of
variability measurement is demonstrated in dementia subjects.
(JINS, 2002, 8, 360–372.)
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Neurology (clinical),Clinical Psychology,General Neuroscience
Cited by
89 articles.
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