| Literature DB >> 27833550 |
Steven Lenio1, Frances M Lissemore1, Martha Sajatovic2, Kathleen A Smyth1, Curtis Tatsuoka1, Wojbor A Woyczynski3, Alan J Lerner1.
Abstract
Objective: To study the dynamics of clustering semantic fluency responses and switching between clusters.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; Weibull distribution; cluster-switch analysis; cognitive impairment; semantic fluency testing; semantic memory
Year: 2016 PMID: 27833550 PMCID: PMC5081546 DOI: 10.3389/fnagi.2016.00252
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Aging Neurosci ISSN: 1663-4365 Impact factor: 5.750
Demographics.
| Low performers | Medium performers | High performers | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age | 81.2 (6.2)* | 78.8 (5.3) | 75.3 (5.5) |
| Education | 2.5 (1.43) | 3.0 (1.20) | 3.79 (1.15)§ |
| SLUMS score | 13.95 (4.4)‡ | 22.81 (4.9) | 25.68 (3.5) |
All values shown are mean (sd). Pair-wise comparisons: *LP older than HP, p < 0.005; Education code: 1–5, 1 = did not finish high school, 5 = post-graduate. .
Figure 1Frequency distribution of intercall times, raw and detrended. Frequencies are for responses anywhere in response sequences; for example, the first bar in (A) represents all the intercall times of less than 1 s regardless of where they occurred in all participants’ sequences, from a first response to a 37th response.
Weibull variable values and comparisons.
| A. Weibull variable values (Mean sd) | B. Weibull pair-wise comparisons | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Low performers | Medium performers | High performers | LP–MP | LP–HP | MP–HP | |
| N60 | 8.3(2.1) | 15.6(1.7) | 23.8(4.8) | * | ** | ** |
| N∞ | 13.40(30.2) | 26.71(13.65) | 50.41(19.89) | ns | ‡‡ | ‡‡ |
| τ | 36.6(0.1) | 52.71(41.51) | 72.02(43.29) | ns | ‡ | ns |
| γ | 0.2(0.5) | 0.29(0.12) | 0.27(0.09) | ns | ns | ns |
| β | 1.1(0.2) | 1.06(0.34) | 1.11(0.19) | ns | ns | ns |
| η | 0.7(0.2) | 0.69(0.19) | 0.76(0.11) | ns | ns | ns |
*MP more words than LP, p < 0.001, **HP more words than MP or LP, both p < 0.005. .
Figure 2Variability in time needed to produce number of responses. LP, Low performer; MP, Medium performer; HP, High performer. (A) Mean time in seconds to reach each response; error bars represent standard error. (B–D) Mean Intercall times, raw and detrended times for each group. Detrended time is unitless. ▀ Raw data, Detrended data.
Figure 3Cluster and switch analysis for all groups. All time in seconds. Error bars represent standard deviation. p-values were determined using one-way ANOVA with Tukey’s post-test; **p < 0.01; ***p < 0.001.
Figure 4Detrended cluster switch characteristics. Intercluster comparisons LP less than MP and HP, *p < 0.05 and **p < 0.01 respectively. All intracluster comparisons p > 0.05. Error bars represent standard deviations, p-values were determined using one-way ANOVA with Tukey’s post-test.
Figure 5Number of responses produced by time remaining from last response to end of 60-s trial. Mean time remaining for LP was greater than mean time remaining for MP or HP (both comparisons p < 0.001); MP and HP not significantly different (p > 0.49).