1.Response inhibition and emotional responding in attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder with comorbid disruptive, impulse-control, and conduct disorders.
Xixi JIANG ; Li LIU ; Haifeng JI ; Ju GAO ; Minmin ZHANG ; Yuncheng ZHU ; Kaiyun LI ; Weidong JI ; Guohai LI
Journal of Southern Medical University 2019;39(1):30-34
OBJECTIVE:
To characterize the traits of neuropsychological functioning deficits in patients with attention-deficit/ hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) with comorbid disruptive, impulse-control, and conduct disorders (DICCD).
METHODS:
Twenty out-patients with ADHD, 20 with ADHD with comorbid DICCD, and 20 with DICCD, all aged 6-16 years, were enrolled in this study, with 20 healthy subjects matched for age, gender and IQ serving as the healthy controls. The patients were diagnosed according to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Revision (DSM-5). All the subjects were assessed with Golden Stroop test and emotional Stroop test to evaluate their response inhibition and emotional responding.
RESULTS:
In Golden Stroop test, the interference scores (IGs) of errors and reaction time both differed significantly among the groups ( < 0.05), and were the highest in patients with ADHD only. In emotional Stroop test, the mean reaction time (MRT) showed significant differences among the groups ( < 0.05); the MRT of positive- congruent trials in ADHD with comorbid DICCD group was shorter than that in ADHD group but longer than that in group DICCD; the MRT in the 3 case groups were all longer than that in the control group. The MRT of both positive-incongruent trials and negative-congruent trials in ADHD with comorbid DICCD group and DICCD group was shorter than that in ADHD group but longer than that in the control group. The MRT of negative- incongruent trials in DICCD group was shorter than that in ADHD group and ADHD with comorbid DICCD group but longer than that in the control group.
CONCLUSIONS
The response inhibition deficit and abnormal emotional responding are the core symptoms of ADHD. Bias emotional stimuli may render response inhibitory dysfunction in patients with DICCD with callous-unemotional traits of emotional responding disorder, especially in dealing with negative emotional trials, while the comorbidity of ADHD and DICCD tends to have the emotional response trait of DICCD.
Adolescent
;
Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity
;
diagnosis
;
physiopathology
;
Attention Deficit and Disruptive Behavior Disorders
;
diagnosis
;
physiopathology
;
Case-Control Studies
;
Child
;
Comorbidity
;
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders
;
Emotions
;
Humans
;
Reaction Time
;
Stroop Test
2.Development of Web-Based Cognitive Training Program : Preliminary Study
Hyemi PARK ; Jun Ki LEE ; Yong Jung KWON ; Jungeun KIM ; Siekyeong KIM
Journal of Korean Geriatric Psychiatry 2019;23(2):39-44
stroop tests, improved. Especially in the case of free recall test, the greater increase of scores in elderly with high risk of dementia was shown.CONCLUSION: Participation in this program has confirmed improvements in verbal memory registration and retrieval ability, attention and executive function. Since the improvement was especially prominent in memory retrieval ability in elderly with high risk of dementia, it can be said that early application of the program before the diagnosis of dementia is important.]]>
Aged
;
Alzheimer Disease
;
Chungcheongbuk-do
;
Dementia
;
Depression
;
Diagnosis
;
Education
;
Executive Function
;
Humans
;
Memory
;
Mild Cognitive Impairment
;
Program Development
;
Stroop Test
3.Comparing Attention and Cognitive Function in School Children across Noise Conditions: A Quasi-Experimental Study.
Soo young BHANG ; Jaekook YOON ; Joohyun SUNG ; Cheolin YOO ; Changsun SIM ; Changmyung LEE ; Jaewon LEE ; Jiho LEE
Psychiatry Investigation 2018;15(6):620-627
OBJECTIVE: The effect of acute noise on cognitive function has long been a topic of study, yet these effects remain a serious problem for learning performance in school children. METHODS: From November 15, 2010 to December 8, 2010, we enrolled 268 students from three elementary schools (135 boys and 133 girls, 10–12 years old) in Ulsan, Korea. The study subjects were divided into two groups according to their test conditions (background versus additional noise), and tests were conducted using psychological examination tools. Chi-square tests and general linear models were used to assess the differences of impacts on cognition between the two groups. RESULTS: After adjusting for socio-demographic covariates, the noise significantly affected the results of full-scale IQ, verbal IQ, Continuous Performance Test scores, and Children’s Color Trails Test and Stroop test scores. The groups at high risk of learning difficulties were more affected by noise than low-risk groups. CONCLUSION: These findings suggest that noise is hazardous to the attention and performance of elementary school students, particularly for groups at greater risk for poor academic achievement. Additional studies are needed to identify subject-specific levels of noise that can affect attention and cognitive function.
Child*
;
Cognition*
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Korea
;
Learning
;
Linear Models
;
Noise*
;
Non-Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic*
;
Stroop Test
;
Ulsan
4.Subjective Age and Cognitive Functioning in Old Age.
Jungmin SUK ; Suekyung LEE ; Hoyoung KIM
Journal of Korean Geriatric Psychiatry 2018;22(2):55-63
OBJECTIVE: The present study has examined whether subjective age would be associated with cognitive functioning in older adults. METHODS: Data from the third wave of Korean Social Life, Health, and Aging Project were used. This study was conducted with 152 older adults aged 60–89 years (mean=72.26, standard deviation=6.41) who completed measures of subjective age, Mini-Mental State Examination for Dementia Screening, Elderly Verbal Learning Test, Digit Span Test, Korean-Color Word Stroop Test, Trail Making Test, Verbal Fluency Test, Korean Boston Naming Test-Short form. The association of subjective age and cognitive functioning was analyzed using hierarchical regression analysis. Sex, depression, and chronological age were included as control variables. RESULTS: Hierarchical regression analysis revealed that a younger subjective age was associated with better processing speed, immediate memory, and executive function respectively. Even after controlling for chronological age, depression, and sex, the subjective age was associated with cognitive functioning in old age. CONCLUSION: Beyond chronological age, the subjective experience of age was associated with cognitive aging.
Adult
;
Aged
;
Aging
;
Cognition
;
Cognitive Aging
;
Dementia
;
Depression
;
Executive Function
;
Humans
;
Mass Screening
;
Memory, Short-Term
;
Stroop Test
;
Trail Making Test
;
Verbal Learning
5.Neuro-cognitive Ramifications of Fasting and Feeding in Obese and Non-obese Cases.
Seyed Ali MOSTAFAVI ; Ali KHALEGHI ; Safa Rafiei VAND ; Seyyed Salman ALAVI ; Mohammad Reza MOHAMMADI
Clinical Psychopharmacology and Neuroscience 2018;16(4):481-488
Preliminary studies have claimed that short term fasting would negatively affect school performance and cognition. In contrast some other studies have reported not important decline in cognition and executive function as a result of fasting. Also limited attention was generally devoted to dietetic regimens, nutritional status and body weight. Yet neuroscience and neuro-cognitive aspects of acute hunger on the electroencephalogram and differences between obese and non-obese cases is not well understood. Hence, we decided to design and perform a case study in a more controlled situation similar to reality. Therefore, we performed several examinations including subjective tests (for eating status) and objective tests (cognitive tests such as Stroop effect and Sternberg search and electroencephalogram measures such as steady-state visual evoked potential and auditory steady-state responses) for an obese and a non-obese academic case before and after a simple breakfast. The results showed that the breakfast effects on the neuro-cognitive functions depend on either obesity status, nutritional status of the case or the type of cognitive task (visual or auditory). This paper would open a new insight to answer some important questions about the neuro-cognitive implications of fasting and feeding in obese and non-obese human cases.
Body Weight
;
Breakfast
;
Cognition
;
Eating
;
Electroencephalography
;
Evoked Potentials, Visual
;
Executive Function
;
Fasting*
;
Humans
;
Hunger
;
Neurosciences
;
Nutritional Status
;
Obesity
;
Stroop Test
6.Altered Cortical Thicknesses of Left Pars Opercularis and Left Lateral Occipital Gyrus Can Be Associated with Psychotic Symptoms in Patients with Alzheimer's Disease.
Doo Hyoung LEE ; Gyung Mee KIM ; Seon Cheol PARK ; Tae Hyung KIM ; Seung Eun CHOI ; Tae Yeong JEONG ; Bong Ju LEE ; Chi Woong MUN ; Jung Goo LEE ; Young Hoon KIM
Journal of Korean Geriatric Psychiatry 2017;21(2):67-74
OBJECTIVE: The aims of this study was to present an association between the presence of psychotic symptoms and cortical thicknesses/subcortical volumes in patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD). METHODS: Fourteen AD patients with psychotic symptoms and 41 without psychotic symptoms underwent 3T MRI scanning. After adjusting the effects of confounding variables, the cortical thicknesses were compared between the AD patients with and without psychotic symptoms in multiple regions, across the continuous cortical surface. In addition, the subcortical volumes were compared with a structure-by-structure manner. RESULTS: AD patients with psychotic symptoms were characterized by significant smaller cortical thickness of left pars opercularis (F=4.67, p=0.02) and left lateral occipital gyrus (F=6.05, p=0.04) rather than those without psychotic symptoms, after adjusting the effects of age and scores on the Stroop test, non-psychotic items of Neuropsychiatry Inventory and Clinical Dementia Rating, triglyceride level and total intracranial volume. However, there were no significant differences in the subcortical volume between the two groups. CONCLUSION: These results suggest that AD psychosis may reflect more severe deterioration of neuropathologic change in specific brain region.
Alzheimer Disease*
;
Brain
;
Broca Area*
;
Confounding Factors (Epidemiology)
;
Dementia
;
Humans
;
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
;
Neuropsychiatry
;
Occipital Lobe*
;
Psychotic Disorders
;
Stroop Test
;
Triglycerides
7.Anatomical Correlates of Neuropsychological Deficits Among Patients With the Cerebellar Stroke.
Min A SHIN ; Oak Tae PARK ; Joon Ho SHIN
Annals of Rehabilitation Medicine 2017;41(6):924-934
OBJECTIVE: To investigate the anatomical correlates of the neuropsychological deficits in patients with the cerebellar stroke. METHODS: We screened patients who were admitted to the National Rehabilitation Center with the cerebellar stroke between October 2012 and November 2016. The patients with the cerebellar stroke who underwent neuropsychological testing for which the Seoul Neuropsychological Screening Battery (SNSB) or the SNSB-II were enrolled. The neuropsychological function capacities were compared in accordance with the stroke type (hemorrhagic vs. ischemic) and the location (right/left anterior, right/left posterior intermediate, right/left posterior lateral lobe, and vermis). Mean z-scores were computed to compare the patient performances with the population averages. RESULTS: Twenty-six patients (15 with ischemic stroke and 11 with hemorrhagic stroke) with a mean age of 54.8±16.6 years were assessed 8.8±9.2 months after the stroke. Differences in the neuropsychological functioning according to the stroke type were not observed. All of the numerical subtests of the stroke patients showed significantly poorer performances compared with the population averages (mean z-score < 0), and some of the subtests revealed abnormal performances in attention-, visuospatial function-, memory-, and frontal/executive function-related tasks (mean z-score <−1). The patients with the presence of a lesion in the right posterior intermediate lobe of the cerebellum showed a poorer performance in the subtests evaluating the executive function including the Korean-version Stroop Test (p=0.04), the Digit Symbol Coding Test (p=0.01), and the Korean-version Trail Making Test (p=0.02) compared with the patients without that lesion. CONCLUSION: The present study confirms that the cerebellar stroke affects the neuropsychological functioning which is associated with the anatomical site of stroke.
Cerebellum
;
Clinical Coding
;
Cognition
;
Executive Function
;
Humans
;
Mass Screening
;
Neuropsychological Tests
;
Rehabilitation Centers
;
Seoul
;
Stroke*
;
Stroop Test
;
Trail Making Test
8.Anatomical Correlates of Neuropsychological Deficits Among Patients With the Cerebellar Stroke.
Min A SHIN ; Oak Tae PARK ; Joon Ho SHIN
Annals of Rehabilitation Medicine 2017;41(6):924-934
OBJECTIVE: To investigate the anatomical correlates of the neuropsychological deficits in patients with the cerebellar stroke. METHODS: We screened patients who were admitted to the National Rehabilitation Center with the cerebellar stroke between October 2012 and November 2016. The patients with the cerebellar stroke who underwent neuropsychological testing for which the Seoul Neuropsychological Screening Battery (SNSB) or the SNSB-II were enrolled. The neuropsychological function capacities were compared in accordance with the stroke type (hemorrhagic vs. ischemic) and the location (right/left anterior, right/left posterior intermediate, right/left posterior lateral lobe, and vermis). Mean z-scores were computed to compare the patient performances with the population averages. RESULTS: Twenty-six patients (15 with ischemic stroke and 11 with hemorrhagic stroke) with a mean age of 54.8±16.6 years were assessed 8.8±9.2 months after the stroke. Differences in the neuropsychological functioning according to the stroke type were not observed. All of the numerical subtests of the stroke patients showed significantly poorer performances compared with the population averages (mean z-score < 0), and some of the subtests revealed abnormal performances in attention-, visuospatial function-, memory-, and frontal/executive function-related tasks (mean z-score <−1). The patients with the presence of a lesion in the right posterior intermediate lobe of the cerebellum showed a poorer performance in the subtests evaluating the executive function including the Korean-version Stroop Test (p=0.04), the Digit Symbol Coding Test (p=0.01), and the Korean-version Trail Making Test (p=0.02) compared with the patients without that lesion. CONCLUSION: The present study confirms that the cerebellar stroke affects the neuropsychological functioning which is associated with the anatomical site of stroke.
Cerebellum
;
Clinical Coding
;
Cognition
;
Executive Function
;
Humans
;
Mass Screening
;
Neuropsychological Tests
;
Rehabilitation Centers
;
Seoul
;
Stroke*
;
Stroop Test
;
Trail Making Test
9.Neurocognitive Characteristics According to Depression Severity in Patients with Major Depressive Disorder.
Seon Hee HWANG ; Heon Jeong LEE ; Myung Sun KIM
Journal of the Korean Society of Biological Psychiatry 2017;24(3):149-154
OBJECTIVES: This study investigated associations between symptom severity and neurocognitive functions in patients with major depressive disorder using comprehensive neuropsychological tests. METHODS: Ten patients with low depression (LD) and 22 patients with high depression (HD) participated. Symptom severity was determined by both the Beck Depression Inventory and the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale. Additionally, anxiety was measured by the Korean version of the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI-KYZ). Ten subtests of the Korean-Wechsler Adult Intelligence scale (K-WAIS), Stroop test, the word/design fluency tests were administered to assess cognition. RESULTS: The LD and HD groups did not differ in any of cognitive measures but anxiety level. Namely, the HD group obtained significantly higher scores on the state (U = 29.50, p < 0.01) and trait (U = 28.50, p < 0.001) anxiety scales than the LD group. A significant interaction effect between trait anxiety and depression severity was observed on the picture arrangement subtest of the K-WAIS [F (1, 27) = 5.09, p < 0.05]. CONCLUSIONS: Cognitive deficits observed in patients with major depressive disorder may be related to other factors rather than current symptom severity. Trait anxiety possibly moderates the effect of current symptom severity on social judgment in these patients.
Adult
;
Anxiety
;
Cognition
;
Cognition Disorders
;
Depression*
;
Depressive Disorder, Major*
;
Humans
;
Intelligence
;
Judgment
;
Neuropsychological Tests
;
Stroop Test
;
Weights and Measures
10.The Neuropsychological Characteristics in Early Stage of Alzheimer's Patients with Depression.
Youngsoon YANG ; Yong Tae KWAK
Dementia and Neurocognitive Disorders 2016;15(2):37-42
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Although depression is a common psychiatric symptom in Alzheimer's disease (AD), there has not been a lot of research on neuropsychological characteristics of this symptom. To determine the characteristic neuropsychological deficit in patients with depression compared to patients without depression, this study compared each neuropsychological test between AD patients with depression and without depression. METHODS: Psychotropic-naïve (drug-naïve) early stage [Clinical Dementia Rating Scale (CDR)=0.5 or CDR=1] probable AD patients with depression (n=77) and without depression (n=179) were assessed with the Seoul Neuropsychological Screening Battery, which includes measures of memory, intelligence, and executive functioning. RESULTS: AD patients with depression had lower scores on the digit forward, digit backward, calculation, and Color Word Stroop Test tests compared to AD patients without depression. CONCLUSION: Our study showed that AD patients with depression have disproportionate cognitive deficit, suggesting frontal (especially in the left dorsolateral), left hemisphere and left parietal dysfunction. Considering the neuropsychological differences between AD patients with depression and without depression, depression may have specific anatomic substrates.
Alzheimer Disease
;
Cognition Disorders
;
Dementia
;
Depression*
;
Humans
;
Intelligence
;
Mass Screening
;
Memory
;
Neuropsychological Tests
;
Rabeprazole
;
Seoul
;
Stroop Test

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