| Literature DB >> 21853284 |
Ilse A D A Van Tilborg1, Roy P C Kessels, Pauline Kruijt, Arie J Wester, Wouter Hulstijn.
Abstract
Patients with amnesia have deficits in declarative memory but intact memory for motor and perceptual skills, which suggests that explicit memory and implicit memory are distinct. However, the evidence that implicit motor learning is intact in amnesic patients is contradictory. This study investigated implicit sequence learning in amnesic patients with Korsakoff's syndrome (N = 20) and matched controls (N = 14), using the classical Serial Reaction Time Task and a newly developed Pattern Learning Task in which the planning and execution of the responses are more spatially demanding. Results showed that implicit motor learning occurred in both groups of participants; however, on the Pattern Learning Task, the percentage of errors did not increase in the Korsakoff group in the random test phase, which is indicative of less implicit learning. Thus, our findings show that the performance of patients with Korsakoff's syndrome is compromised on an implicit learning task with a strong spatial response component.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21853284 PMCID: PMC3178790 DOI: 10.1007/s00221-011-2841-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Exp Brain Res ISSN: 0014-4819 Impact factor: 1.972
Demographic variables for the Korsakoff patients and the controls, as well as the performance of the Korsakoff patients on standard neuropsychological evaluation (mean, SD between brackets, % impaired patients between squared brackets, based on 1.5 SD below normative mean or established cutoff scores)
| Korsakoff patients ( | Healthy controls ( | |
|---|---|---|
| Age | 52.90 (7.8) | 49.3 (10.4) |
| Sex distribution (m:f) | 16:4 | 7:7 |
| NART-IQ | 98.85 (12.8) | 105.8 (12.8) |
| MMSE | 25.70 (2.1) [5%]d | 29.1 (2.1) |
| RBMTa | 2.78 (2.24) [95%]e | – |
| TMT—Ab | 2.08 (1.70) [60%] | – |
| TMT—Interferenceb | 0.53 (1.46) [27%] | – |
| Stroop Color Word Test—Interferenceb | −0.72 (0.96) [25%] | – |
| Tower of Londonb | −1.78 (1.87) [55%] | – |
| Rey-Osterrieth Complex Figure—Copyc | 43.75 (14.38) [11%] | – |
NART-IQ Dutch version of the National Adult Reading Task—Intelligence Quotient, MMSE Mini-Mental State Examination, RBMT Rivermead Behavioral Memory Test, TMT Trail Making Test
aStandard screening score (0–12)
bStandardized z scores
cPercentile scores
dOne patient performed below the established cutoff of 24, but this patient did not fulfill the clinical criteria for dementia
eOne patient just failed to reach the established cutoff on the RBMT, but this patient had a severe memory impairment on the California Verbal Learning Test, had a lack of insight into his impairments and was spontaneously confabulating, thus fulfilling all criteria for Korsakoff’s syndrome
Fig. 1An example of a ten-trial sequence (A–D–B–C–A–C–B–D–C–B) of the Pattern Learning Task (PLT). The upper panel shows the pen trajectories, and the lower panel displays the absolute velocity of the ten trials. The upper panel depicts the four possible target locations (A, B, C and D) (visible for the participant as open black circles), as well as the cursor (real color: dark blue) and the target (real color: red) positioned at the start of the first movement (from A to D). Directional errors were made in the 5th trial (from A to C) and the 8th trial (from D to C), because these trajectories started in a direction (determined at the periphery; shown as a dotted circle only for A), which deviated by more than 22.5 degrees from the ideal direction. The display seen by the participants consisted only of the dark blue pen cursor and the four black circles (one filled red as the target) positioned in the middle of the PC screen
Fig. 2Mean reaction times per group for the random blocks (R1 and R2) and the fixed-sequence blocks (L1-L4) of the Serial Reaction Time Task (SRTT). Error bars reflect standard errors
Fig. 3Mean error rates across the random blocks (R1 and R2) and the fixed-sequence blocks (L1-L4) of the Serial Reaction Time Task (SRTT)
Fig. 4Mean total times, reaction times, and movement times for the random blocks (R1 and R2) and the fixed-sequence blocks (L1-L4) per group for the Pattern Learning Task (PLT). Error bars reflect standard errors
Fig. 5Mean directional error rates across the random blocks (R1 and R2) and the fixed-sequence blocks (L1-L4) for the Pattern Learning Task (PLT)