Literature DB >> 2455629

Attention impairment and psychomotor retardation in depressed patients: an event-related potential study.

F el Massioui1, N Lesèvre.   

Abstract

The cerebral event-related potentials (ERPs) and reaction times (RTs) of 8 drug-free depressed in-patients (mean age 58, with marked psychomotor retardation) were recorded during a dichotic listening and choice RT task and compared to those of 9 healthy, age-matched controls. The depressed showed significantly longer, more variable RTs than the controls and made more mistakes. Their ERPs for targets in the attended ear differed significantly from those of the controls by the small amplitude (or absence) of the N2 vertex component elicited by the controls in such a situation and by the presence in the same situation of a late frontal slow negativity (LFN) that did not show up in the grand average ERP of the control group. These results were discussed in terms of the two components of the processing negativity described by Näätänen (1982, 1985) and according to resource models of attention: whereas the controls would perform this easy task quickly thanks to quasi-automatic matching processes (reflected by the vertex N2), the depressed would need further effortful, controlled processing (reflected by the LFN) to perform the task.

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Mesh:

Year:  1988        PMID: 2455629     DOI: 10.1016/0013-4694(88)90193-9

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Electroencephalogr Clin Neurophysiol        ISSN: 0013-4694


  6 in total

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3.  Fronto-temporal alterations within the first 200 ms during an attentional task distinguish major depression, non-clinical participants with depressed mood and healthy controls: a potential biomarker?

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4.  The neurocognitive functioning in bipolar disorder: a systematic review of data.

Authors:  Eirini Tsitsipa; Konstantinos N Fountoulakis
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6.  Event-Related Potential Measures of Attention Capture in Adolescent Inpatients With Acute Suicidal Behavior.

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  6 in total

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