OBJECTIVE: Research suggests that dementia patients detect fewer action errors than age-matched controls; however, little is known about the derivation of their error-monitoring difficulties. The aims of the study are to evaluate a novel, task-training action intervention (TT-NAT) designed to increase error monitoring in dementia patients and to pinpoint the relation between error monitoring and neuropsychological processes. METHOD: Participants (n = 45) with dementia were administered the Standard NAT, a performance-based test requiring completion of three everyday tasks. A second group (n = 42) was administered the TT-NAT, which includes a brief training session prior to the commencement of each task. All participants were compared on the following variables: total errors, proportion of errors detected, and proportion of errors corrected. Correlations between error-monitoring variables and neuropsychological tests of executive functioning and language were performed. RESULTS: TT-NAT participants produced fewer total errors and detected significantly more errors than Standard NAT participants (z = 3.0; t = 3.36; p < .05). Error detection was strongly related to only the language composite index (r = .57, p = .00) in the TT-NAT, whereas it was moderately related to both the language (r = .31, p = .04) and executive composite (r = .36, p = .02) indices in the Standard NAT condition. CONCLUSION: Review of task steps and objects before task performance may be a promising intervention for error-monitoring deficits in dementia patients; this finding has implications for neuropsychological rehabilitation of functional deficits in this population.
OBJECTIVE: Research suggests that dementiapatients detect fewer action errors than age-matched controls; however, little is known about the derivation of their error-monitoring difficulties. The aims of the study are to evaluate a novel, task-training action intervention (TT-NAT) designed to increase error monitoring in dementiapatients and to pinpoint the relation between error monitoring and neuropsychological processes. METHOD:Participants (n = 45) with dementia were administered the Standard NAT, a performance-based test requiring completion of three everyday tasks. A second group (n = 42) was administered the TT-NAT, which includes a brief training session prior to the commencement of each task. All participants were compared on the following variables: total errors, proportion of errors detected, and proportion of errors corrected. Correlations between error-monitoring variables and neuropsychological tests of executive functioning and language were performed. RESULTS: TT-NAT participants produced fewer total errors and detected significantly more errors than Standard NAT participants (z = 3.0; t = 3.36; p < .05). Error detection was strongly related to only the language composite index (r = .57, p = .00) in the TT-NAT, whereas it was moderately related to both the language (r = .31, p = .04) and executive composite (r = .36, p = .02) indices in the Standard NAT condition. CONCLUSION: Review of task steps and objects before task performance may be a promising intervention for error-monitoring deficits in dementiapatients; this finding has implications for neuropsychological rehabilitation of functional deficits in this population.
Authors: Tania Giovannetti; Priscilla Britnell; Laura Brennan; Andrew Siderowf; Murray Grossman; David J Libon; Brianne M Bettcher; Francesca Rouzard; Joel Eppig; Gregory A Seidel Journal: J Int Neuropsychol Soc Date: 2012-05-24 Impact factor: 2.892
Authors: José M Cogollor; Javier Rojo-Lacal; Joachim Hermsdörfer; Manuel Ferre; Maria Teresa Arredondo Waldmeyer; Christos Giachritsis; Alan Armstrong; Jose Manuel Breñosa Martinez; Doris Anabelle Bautista Loza; José María Sebastián Journal: JMIR Rehabil Assist Technol Date: 2018-03-26
Authors: Jose Antonio Merchán-Baeza; Maria Rodriguez-Bailon; Giorgia Ricchetti; Alba Navarro-Egido; María Jesús Funes Journal: BMJ Open Date: 2020-10-26 Impact factor: 2.692