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Clinical Trial
. 1998 Sep;4(5):426-34.
doi: 10.1017/s1355617798455024.

Cognitive and motor slowing in Alzheimer's disease and geriatric depression

Affiliations
Clinical Trial

Cognitive and motor slowing in Alzheimer's disease and geriatric depression

R D Nebes et al. J Int Neuropsychol Soc. 1998 Sep.

Abstract

While response slowing on psychological tasks is a symptom of both depression and Alzheimer's disease (AD), the underlying mechanisms may be quite different: a slowing of cognitive processing in AD and a motor retardation in depression. This hypothesis was tested by examining the rate at which participants performed a simple cognitive operation: subvocal pronunciation. Participants were shown words of between one and three syllables and were asked to decide whether each word ended in a particular sound. This task required participants to transform the written word into its phonological representation, an operation thought to involve subvocal pronunciation. Decision time rose linearly with the number of syllables in all three subject groups. The linear function of the AD patients had a significantly greater slope, indicating a slower rate of subvocal pronunciation, whereas the slope was the same for the normal old and depressed. Both the depressed and AD patients had a higher intercept than the normal old, suggesting a sensorimotor slowing. After treatment, the intercept of the linear function for depressed patients fell, but there was no change in the slope. Thus, this study suggests that AD produces a slowing in both cognitive and motor processes, whereas depression results solely in a motor retardation.

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