What Drives Animal Fluency Performance in Cantonese-Speaking Chinese Patients with Adult-Onset Psychosis?

Author:

Hui Christy Lai-Ming1,See Sally Hiu-Wah1ORCID,Chiu Tsz-Ching1,Pintos Andrea Stephanie1,Kroyer Johanna M.1,Suen Yi-Nam1,Lee Edwin Ho-Ming1,Chan Sherry Kit-Wa12ORCID,Chang Wing-Chung12,Elvevåg Brita3,Chen Eric Yu-Hai12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychiatry, School of Clinical Medicine, University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China

2. State Key Laboratory of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China

3. Department of Clinical Medicine, University of Tromsø—The Arctic University of Norway, 9037 Tromsø, Norway

Abstract

Among the numerous studies investigating semantic factors associated with functioning in psychotic patients, most have been conducted on western populations. By contrast, the current cross-sectional study involved native Cantonese-speaking Chinese participants. Using the category fluency task, we compared performance between patients and healthy participants and examined clinical and sociodemographic correlates. First-episode psychosis patients (n = 356) and gender- and age-matched healthy participants (n = 35) were asked to generate as many ‘animals’ as they could in a minute. As expected, patients generated fewer correct responses (an average of 15.5 vs. 22.9 words), generated fewer clusters (an average of 3.7 vs. 5.4 thematically grouped nouns), switched less between clusters (on average 8.0 vs. 11.9 switches) and, interestingly, produced a larger percentage of Chinese zodiac animals than healthy participants (an average of 37.7 vs. 24.2). However, these significant group differences in the clusters and switches disappeared when the overall word production was controlled for. Within patients, education was the strongest predictor of category fluency performance (namely the number of correct responses, clusters, and switches). The findings suggest that an overall slowness in patients may account for the group differences in category fluency performance rather than any specific abnormality per se.

Funder

Hong Kong Jockey Club Charities Trust

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Neuroscience

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