Literature DB >> 20034676

Recollection deficiencies in patients with major depressive disorder.

Justine L Drakeford1, Nicola M J Edelstyn, Femi Oyebode, Shrikant Srivastava, William R Calthorpe, Tirthankar Mukherjee.   

Abstract

Neuropsychological research suggests that recognition memory (RM) and recall memory are impaired in patients with a major depressive disorder or a dysphoric mood state. This study examines the proposal that abnormalities in recollection (a form of recall) result from a breakdown in frontal strategic memory processes involved in encoding and retrieval, and executive functions linked to reality monitoring, planning, problem-solving, reasoning and decision-making. We investigated two predictions arising from this theory. Firstly, patients diagnosed with a major depressive disorder (MDD) will display a dissociation between (deficient) recollection and (preserved) familiarity. Secondly, if recollection impairments are indicative of a breakdown in prefrontal strategic memory processes which are dependent, at least in part, on executive processes, then an explicit correlational approach predicts that recollection will be positively associated with the severity of executive dysfunction in MDD patients. The remember/know paradigm was used to investigate RM for words and neutral faces in 16 MDD patients and 16 healthy volunteers, matched for age, gender and estimates of premorbid IQ. Measures of executive function included working memory, reasoning and decision-making. Applying the Dual Process Signal Detection interpretation of the remember/know data, the MDD group displayed significant impairments in RM and recollection rates for both verbal and neutral facial memoranda. In contrast, familiarity-aware rates were preserved. There was no evidence of executive dysfunction in the patient group, and little evidence that recollection rates correlated with executive function. Furthermore, a single process signal detection approach suggested that the MDD patients displayed a reduction in sensitivity for RM and remember rates but not know responses. The criteria for detecting studied from unstudied items, and remembering from knowing, were the same in both patient and healthy control groups. Taken together, these findings are consistent with the view that MDD is marked by a decline in RM, which is underpinned by an impairment in recollection rather than familiarity processes. The extent to which the recollection deficiencies arise from disruption of strategic memory and executive processes requires further investigation. 2008 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20034676     DOI: 10.1016/j.psychres.2008.08.010

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychiatry Res        ISSN: 0165-1781            Impact factor:   3.222


  7 in total

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2.  Depression and episodic memory across the adult lifespan: A meta-analytic review.

Authors:  Taylor A James; Samuel Weiss-Cowie; Zachary Hopton; Paul Verhaeghen; Vonetta M Dotson; Audrey Duarte
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Authors:  D A van Dijk; M L Deen; Th M van den Boogaard; H G Ruhé; J Spijker; F P M L Peeters
Journal:  Eur Arch Psychiatry Clin Neurosci       Date:  2022-10-17       Impact factor: 5.760

4.  Recognition memory for pictorial material in subclinical depression.

Authors:  Cristina Ramponi; Fionnuala C Murphy; Andrew J Calder; Philip J Barnard
Journal:  Acta Psychol (Amst)       Date:  2010-08-21

Review 5.  Disorders of memory and plasticity in psychiatric disease.

Authors:  Christopher Pittenger
Journal:  Dialogues Clin Neurosci       Date:  2013-12       Impact factor: 5.986

6.  Validation of the face-name pairs task in major depression: impaired recall but not recognition.

Authors:  Kimberley J Smith; Sinead Mullally; Declan McLoughlin; Shane O'Mara
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2014-02-12

7.  Neural correlates of verbal recognition memory in obese adults with and without major depressive disorder.

Authors:  Maria R Restivo; Geoffrey B Hall; Benicio N Frey; Margaret C McKinnon; Valerie H Taylor
Journal:  Brain Behav       Date:  2020-09-20       Impact factor: 2.708

  7 in total

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