| Literature DB >> 20091112 |
Anna A E Vinkhuyzen1, Sophie van der Sluis, Dorret I Boomsma, Eco J C de Geus, Danielle Posthuma.
Abstract
The Sternberg Memory Scanning (SMS) task provides a measure of processing speed (PS) and working memory retrieval speed (WMS). In this task, participants are presented with sets of stimuli that vary in size. After a delay, one item is presented, and participants indicate whether or not the item was part of the set. Performance is assessed by speed and accuracy for both the positive (item is part of the set) and the negative trials (items is not part of the set). To examine the causes of variation in PS and WMS, 623 adult twins and their siblings completed the SMS task. A non-linear growth curve (nLGC) model best described the increase in reaction time with increasing set size. Genetic analyses showed that WMS (modeled as the Slope in the nLGC model) has a relatively small variance which is not due to genetic variation while PS (modeled as the Intercept in the nLGC model) showed large individual differences, part of which could be attributed to additive genetic factors. Heritability was 38% for positive and 32% for negative trials. Additional multivariate analyses showed that the genetic effects on PS for positive and negative trials were completely shared. We conclude that genetic influences on working memory performance are more likely to act upon basic processing speed and (pre)motoric processes than on the speed with which an item is retrieved from short term memory.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 20091112 PMCID: PMC2853698 DOI: 10.1007/s10519-009-9315-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Behav Genet ISSN: 0001-8244 Impact factor: 2.805
Error rates for full and selected sample, and men and women separately
| Condition | Positive trials | Negative trials | |||||||||
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| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | ||
| Full sample | ♂ | .77 | .81 | .80 | .77 | .71 | .75 | .80 | .78 | .77 | .75 |
| ♀ | .79 | .81 | .80 | .77 | .71 | .75 | .80 | .79 | .77 | .74 | |
| Selected sample | ♂ | .88 | .89 | .89 | .88 | .86 | .88 | .89 | .89 | .90 | .88 |
| ♀ | .89 | .89 | .89 | .89 | .86 | .88 | .90 | .89 | .88 | .88 | |
The full sample consists of all participants who completed the SMS-task (N = 726, 315 men, 411 women). The selected sample consists of all subjects who had at least 80% correct/non-outlying trials in each condition, and minimally 70% correct/non-outlying trials overall (N = 623, 267 men, 356 women)
Fig. 1Path diagram of a non-linear growth curve model where the Intercept (I), Linear slope (L), and Quadratic slope (Q) are derived from 5 observed measures (M1–M5) for one twin pair. Parameters ε1 to ε5 denote the residuals of the observed measures M1–M5. The variance of the Intercept is decomposed into additive genetic effects (A), dominance genetic effects (D) and unique environmental effects (E). The variance of the Intercept is modeled via parameters a, d, and e. Between subjects, correlations between additive genetic effects (A) are fixed to 1 for MZ twins and to .5 for DZ twins and regular siblings, correlations between dominance genetic effects (D) are fixed to 1 in MZ twins and to .25 in DZ twins and regular siblings, while correlations between unique environmental effects (E) are fixed to 0 in all groups. Sex and age effects were modeled on the means of the Intercept, Linear slope, and Quadratic slope. Correlation between the three latent factors I, L and Q, are theoretically possible (not drawn)
Age-adjusted means and standard deviations for the ten mean scores for DT+ and DT− (in ms) for men and women separately
| Condition | Trial | Men | Women | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Positive | 1 | 233 | 416.30 | 86.80 | 325 | 411.73 | 87.70 |
| 2 | 242 | 430.56 | 84.04 | 334 | 424.92 | 78.43 | |
| 3 | 247 | 460.23 | 86.30 | 329 | 455.98 | 82.75 | |
| 4 | 219 | 489.73 | 88.47 | 306 | 476.99 | 84.94 | |
| 5 | 187 | 497.68 | 86.34 | 266 | 494.18 | 88.79 | |
| Negative | 1 | 220 | 447.21 | 88.70 | 303 | 438.11 | 83.16 |
| 2 | 249 | 477.20 | 84.04 | 322 | 464.98 | 83.02 | |
| 3 | 234 | 498.38 | 88.31 | 323 | 481.13 | 81.52 | |
| 4 | 225 | 513.83 | 84.09 | 309 | 508.72 | 83.29 | |
| 5 | 224 | 538.35 | 95.82 | 272 | 525.28 | 82.57 | |
Note: Means and standard deviations were computed in Mplus version 5 (Muthén and Muthén 1998), which computes for familial relatedness corrected standard errors and standard deviations
N number of participants, M mean, SD standard deviation
Model fitting results for decision time positive (DT+)
| Model | −2LL |
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| 1 | Saturated | 10615.60 | 2,656 | |||
| 2 | Drop covariances between Intercept, Linear slope and Quadratic slope within and between subjects | 10630.38 | 2,665 | 1 | 14.77 | .10 |
| 3 | Drop variance Quadratic slope and familial covariance related to the Quadratic slope | 10632.69 | 2,668 | 2 | 2.32 | .51 |
| 4 | Drop variance Linear slope and familial covariance related to the Linear slope | 10657.63 | 2,671 | 3 | 24.93 | <.001 |
| 5 | Drop variance Intercept and familial covariance related to the Intercept | 13754.38 | 2,671 | 3 | 3121.69 | <.001 |
| 6 | Drop sex effects means I, S, and Q | 10634.64 | 2,671 | 3 | 1.95 | .58 |
| 7 | Drop age effects means I, S, and Q | 10719.19 | 2,674 | 6 | 84.54 | <.001 |
| 7a | Drop age effects means I | 10713.79 | 2,672 | 6 | 79.15 | <.001 |
| 7b | Drop age effects means S | 10634.66 | 2,672 | 6 | <1 | .89 |
| 7c | Drop age effects means Q | 10637.87 | 2,672 | 6 | 3.22 | .07 |
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| 8 | Full ADE | 10643.29 | 2,673 | |||
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| 10 | Drop A and D intercept | 10664.45 | 2,675 | 8 | 21.16 | <.001 |
Eq equal, −2LL minus 2 log likelihood, df degrees of freedom, vs versus, χ 2 Chi square (difference in −2LL), p p-value, NS non significant
Model fitting results for decision time negative (DT−)
| Model | −2LL |
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| 1 | Saturated | 10263.17 | 2,649 | |||
| 2 | Drop covariances between Intercept, Linear slope and Quadratic slope within and between subjects | 10277.65 | 2,658 | 1 | 14.48 | .11 |
| 3 | Drop variance Quadratic slope and familial covariance related to Quadratic slope | 10279.73 | 2,661 | 2 | 2.08 | .56 |
| 4 | Drop variance Linear slope and familial covariance related to Linear slope | 10301.07 | 2,664 | 3 | 21.34 | <.001 |
| 5 | Drop variance Intercept and familial covariance related to the Intercept | 13715.34 | 2,671 | 3 | 3435.61 | <.001 |
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| 7 | Drop age effects means I, S, and Q | 10383.93 | 2,667 | 6 | 99.30 | <.001 |
| 7a | Drop age effects means I | 10359.66 | 2,665 | 6 | 75.03 | <.001 |
| 7b | Drop age effects means S | 10294.58 | 2,665 | 6 | 9.95 | <.01 |
| 7c | Drop age effects means Q | 10298.14 | 2,665 | 6 | 13.51 | <.001 |
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| 8 | Full ACE | 10287.90 | 2,664 | |||
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| 10 | Drop A intercept | 10289.49 | 2,665 | 8 | 1.59 | .21 |
| 11 | Drop A and C intercept | 10303.19 | 2,666 | 8 | 15.29 | <.001 |
Eq equal, −2LL minus 2 log likelihood, df degrees of freedom, vs versus, χ 2 Chi square (difference in −2LL), p p-value, NS non significant