| Literature DB >> 24049443 |
Maartje M E de Werd1, Daniëlle Boelen, Marcel G M Olde Rikkert, Roy P C Kessels.
Abstract
Errorless learning (EL) is a principle used to teach new information or skills to people with cognitive impairment. In people with dementia, EL principles have mostly been studied in laboratory tasks that have little practical relevance for the participants concerned, yet show positive effects. This is the first paper to exclusively review the literature concerning the effects of EL on the performance of useful everyday tasks in people with dementia. The role of factors such as type of dementia, type of task, training intensity, EL elements, outcome measures, quality of experimental design, and follow-up are discussed. The results indicate that, compared with errorful learning (EF) or no treatment, EL is more effective in teaching adults with dementia a variety of meaningful daily tasks or skills, with gains being generally maintained at follow-up. The effectiveness of EL is highly relevant for clinical practice because it shows that individuals with dementia are still able to acquire meaningful skills and engage in worthwhile activities, which may potentially increase their autonomy and independence, and ultimately their quality of life, as well as reduce caregiver burden and professional dependency. Suggestions for future research are given, along with recommendations for effective EL-based training programs, with the aim of developing a clinical manual for professionals working in dementia care.Entities:
Keywords: dementia; errorless learning; everyday activities; implicit learning; occupational therapy; review
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24049443 PMCID: PMC3775624 DOI: 10.2147/CIA.S46809
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Interv Aging ISSN: 1176-9092 Impact factor: 4.458
Error-reducing methods applied in the studies reviewed
| Method | Definition |
|---|---|
| No guessing | The participant is encouraged not to guess to prevent errors. Either the correct response is immediately offered, after which the participant is asked to repeat it, or the correct response is provided in case of hesitation or uncertainty. |
| Stepwise approach | The task is mastered step by step. |
| Modeling | The therapist demonstrates to the participant how each step is to be performed. The participant is first invited to repeat and master each step, before he/she is asked to execute the whole task unprompted, independently, and without errors. |
| Verbal instruction | The participant is explicitly explained what to do in each of the task steps or what is to be repeated. |
| Visual instruction | The therapist may give the participant any visual cue or prompt to help guide the participant through the task, such as a checklist with pictograms, a written action plan, or colored stickers to indicate a specific object or place. |
| Vanishing cues | Targets are presented and cues gradually withheld after successful recall trials until the participant is able to give the correct response in the absence of cues. |
| Spaced retrieval | The participant is asked to recall (new) information after increasing delays. The therapist provides the correct response when the participant hesitates or indicates to not know the correct response. The recall interval is then reduced until the participant is able to reproduce the desired response, after which the interval is increased again until the participant is able to give the correct response after the longest interval. |
Studies reviewed that compared the effectiveness of errorless learning and errorful learning or no treatment in people with dementia
| Study | n | MMSE score | Dementia type and severity | Task type and novelty | Training intensity: duration and frequency | Training location | EL elements and additional learning methods | Experimental design | Outcome measures | Effectiveness | Maintenance of treatment gains |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bier et al | 1 | 26 | Minimal AD | Use of calendar to reduce repetitive questioning about date and calls made to family New | 1.5 hours Unclear | At home | Spaced retrieval | ABAB | Number/percentage of correct steps/responses at baseline and after intervention | (+) | One month (+) |
| Bier et al | 1 | 26 | Minimal AD | Operating the cassette deck Familiar | 1.5 hours | At home | Stepwise approach | Multiple baseline across activities | Number/percentage of correct steps/responses at baseline and after intervention | (+) | 1, 3, 6, 9 weeks (+) |
| Bier et al | 1 | 26 | Minimal AD | Participating in a social activity Familiar | 1.5 hours | At home | Spaced retrieval | BA | Number/percentage of correct steps/responses at baseline and after intervention | (+) | 1, 3, 6 weeks (+) |
| Clare et al | 1 | 27 | Minimal AD | Names of members of a social club Unknown | Unclear | At home | No guessing | Multiple baseline across items | Number/percentage of correct steps/responses at baseline and after intervention | (+) | 1, 3, 6, 9 months (+) |
| Clare et al | 1 | 21–26 | Minimal to mild AD | Familiar face-name associations Familiar | Unclear | Unknown | No guessing | Multiple baseline across items | Number/percentage of correct steps/responses at baseline and after intervention | (+) | 1, 3, 6 months (+) |
| Clare et al | 1 | 21–26 | Minimal to mild AD | Personal information Familiar | Unclear | Unknown | No guessing | Multiple baseline across items | Number/percentage of correct steps/responses at baseline and after intervention | (+) | 1, 3, 6 months (+) |
| Clare et al | 1 | 21–26 | Minimal to mild AD | Use of calendar and memory board | Unclear | Unknown | Verbal instructions | ABA | Number/percentage of correct steps/responses at baseline and after intervention | (+) | 3, 6 months (+) |
| Clare et al | 1 | 21–26 | Minimal to mild AD | Use of a memory aid | Unclear | Unknown | Verbal instructions | ABA | Number/percentage of correct steps/responses at baseline and after intervention | (−) | 3, 6 months (−) |
| Clare et al | 1 | 27 | Minimal AD | Names of members of a social club n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a (is a follow-up) | Trained items compared to untrained items | Number/percentage of correct steps/responses at baseline and after intervention | n/a | Trained items |
| Clare et al | 12 | 19–29 | Minimal to mild AD | Familiar face-name associations | Unclear | Unknown | Condition 1 | Pretest/post-test design | Number/percentage of correct steps/responses at baseline and after intervention | Condition 1 (+) | Condition 1 |
| Clare et al | 1 | 24 | Minimal AD | Names of members of a support group | Unclear | Unknown | Condition 1 | Multiple baseline across items | Number/percentage of correct steps/responses at baseline and after intervention | (+) | 3, 6 months (+) |
| Dechamps et al | 14 | 10–26 | Minimal to moderate AD | IADL task | 30 minutes | At home | Condition 1 | Within-subject | Number/percentage of correct steps/responses at baseline and after intervention | Condition 1 (++) | 1 week |
| Jokel and Anderson | 7 | 23–29 | Minimal to mild SD | Names of objects | Each set: 2.5 hours | Unknown | EL, passive | Within-subject | Number/percentage of correct steps/responses at baseline and after intervention | EL condition (++) | 1 month |
| Lekeu et al | 2 | 21 and 22 | Mild AD | Use of a mobile telephone Unknown | 45 minutes | Unknown | Asking open ended questions | ABA | Number/percentage of correct steps/responses at baseline and after intervention | (+) | n/a |
| Metzler-Baddeley and Snowden | 2 | 11 and 26 | Minimal and moderate AD | Names of objects Familiar | Unclear | At home and in the hospital | EL condition | Within-subject | Number/percentage of correct steps/responses at baseline and after intervention | EL condition (+) | n/a |
| Noonan et al | 8 | 9–24 | Minimal to severe AD | Names of objects | 40–60 minutes | Unknown | EL condition | Within-subject | Number/percentage of correct steps/responses at baseline and after intervention | 1 week | 5 weeks |
| Provencher et al | 1 | 24 | Minimal AD | Route learning | 30 minutes | Unknown | Stepwise approach | Multiple baseline across routes | Number/percentage of correct steps/responses at baseline and after intervention | (+) | 10 weeks (+) |
| Robinson et al | 1 | 26 | Minimal SD | Names, definitions, and the use of objects | Unclear | Unknown | Condition 1 | ABA | Number/percentage of correct steps/responses at baseline and after intervention | 3 days | 1 month |
| Robinson et al | 1 | 22 | Mild SD | Names, definitions, and the use of objects | Unclear | Unknown | Condition 1 | ABA | Number/percentage of correct steps/responses at baseline and after intervention | 3 days | 1 month |
| Thivierge et al | 1 | 19 | Mild AD | Using voice mail | 45 minutes-1 hour | Unknown | Stepwise approach | Multiple baseline across subjects | Number/percentage of correct steps/responses at baseline and after intervention | (+) | 1 and 5 weeks (+) |
| Thivierge et al | 1 | 25 | Minimal AD | Use of an answering machine | 45 minutes-1 hour | Unknown | Stepwise approach | Multiple baseline across subjects | Number/percentage of correct steps/responses at baseline and after intervention | (+) | 1 and 5 weeks (+) |
| van Tilborg et al | 10 | 15–26 | Minimal to moderate dementia | Use of a microwave and a coffee maker New | 15 minutes | Unknown | EL condition 1 | Counter-balanced self-controlled cases | Number/percentage of correct steps/responses at baseline and after intervention | EL condition 1 (+) | 7–10 days |
| Yamaguchi et al | 2 | 22 and 23 | Mild AD | Virtually preparing two slices of bread and virtually preparing a cup of coffee | 20 minutes | Unknown | EL condition 1 | Mixed factorial design between two single cases | Number/percentage of correct steps/responses at baseline and after intervention | EL condition 1 (+) | n/a |
Note:
No P-values available.
Abbreviations: n, number of participants; IADL, instrumental activities of daily living; MMSE, Mini-Mental State Examination; AD, Alzheimer dementia; SD, semantic dementia; EL, errorless learning; EF, errorful learning; n/a, not applicable; (+), significant effect; (++), significant effect versus baseline and other learning conditions; (−), nonsignificant effect.