| Literature DB >> 30310755 |
Marisa Borges Ferreira1,2, Paulo Alexandre Pereira2,3, Marta Parreira2, Ines Sousa4, José Figueiredo2, João José Cerqueira5,6, Antonio Filipe Macedo1,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Stroop test is frequently used to assess deficits in inhibitory control in people with multiple sclerosis (MS). This test has limitations and antisaccade eye movements, that also measure inhibitory control, may be an alternative to Stroop.Entities:
Keywords: Antisaccades; Executive functions; Eye movements; Inhibitory control; Multiple sclerosis; Stroop test
Year: 2018 PMID: 30310755 PMCID: PMC6174870 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.5737
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Summary of the demographic and clinical information of the final sample of participants for both groups (SD = standard deviation).
| Variable | Group | |
|---|---|---|
| MS ( | Control ( | |
| Gender ( | 24 females (63%) | 21 females (55%) |
| Age (mean (SD)) | 37 (6) | 36 (6) |
| Time since diagnosis in months (mean (SD)) | 96 (59) | – |
| EDSS (median (IQR)) | 1.5 (2) | – |
Note:
Differences in age and gender were not statistically significant.
Summary of the psychological evaluation results of the final sample of MS patients and normalised data for the Portuguese population (SD = standard deviation).
| Variable | Group | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| MS ( | Normative | ||
| Mean (SD) | Mean (SD) | ||
| MOCA total | 24.03 (2.7) | 26.4 (2.2) | |
| Digit span (WAIS-III) | 9.8 (2.2) | 10 (3) | 0.68 |
| Trail making (women) | 111 (64) | 61 (37) | |
| Trail making (men) | 108 (54) | 52 (37) | |
| SDMT (women) | 51.61 (8.4) | 60 (10.1) | |
| SDMT (men) | 51.07 (10.7) | 65.9 (12.2) | |
| COWAT | 32.3 (10.25) | 33.2 (9.6) | 0.60 |
| Twenty questions (D-KEFS) | 10.5 (3.3) | 10 (3) | 0.35 |
Figure 1The antisaccade paradigm and position traces of the eyes.
(A) The antisaccade paradigm. Step 1: subjects had to fixate a centrally located target (cross, 30 × 30 mm, ref 23) during an interval of 1,250 or 1,600 ms which assigned in a random order. The fixation target for step 1 was only visible after fixating a gaze-contingent box (10 × 10 mm) for 150 ms. Step 2: after the interval defined for step 1, a peripheral target was presented at 5° or 10° of visual angle at right or left side of the fixation target, all locations were assigned in random order (the arrow points the direction of the expected antisaccade). (B) Representation of changes in eye movement amplitude with time during three trials. Antisaccades where performed to the right when the target was presented at 10° from the central fixation target on left side of the screen. The thick-solid line shows a trial in which a corrective saccade was necessary after an initial error—amplitude has been computed using xy coordinates and that is why it never reaches 0° during the corrective saccade. The dotted line shows a correct AS with a good spatial precision when compared with the mirrored position of the target. The thin-solid line shows a correct AS with a large latency and poor spatial precision. In the thin-solid line the triangle shows the instant at which the AS was detected and the dot shows the instant when the AS ended.
Summary of Stroop results for the multiple sclerosis group.
| Stroop test score | Values | |
|---|---|---|
| Mean (SD) | Median (IQR) | |
| Word reading (W) | 90.97 (13.01) | 95.00 (5.00) |
| Colour naming (C) | 69.50 (9.99) | 69.00 (5.75) |
| Interference | ||
| Raw (CW = correct colours in 45 s) | 35.50 (9.04) | 38.00 (5.75) |
| Golden = ((W × C)/(W + C)) − CW | −3.35 (7.50) | −0.55 (3.85) |
| Relative = ((C − CW/C) × 100 | 48.08 (10.47) | 43.28 (7.16) |
| Ratio = (C/CW) × 10 | 19.54 (3.74) | 17.63 (2.56) |
Note:
Formulas for each score are specified in the table (SD = standard deviation, IQR = interquartile range).
Figure 2Bar graph showing the latency values in milliseconds per saccade type for both groups and for both directions of the expected antisaccades.
Directions indicate the direction of the expected antisaccades (R directions the target was presented left and vice versa for L directions). Bars represent the EMM (mean response for each factor, adjusted for any other variables in the model) and the error bars the SE of the EMM for the specified factors.
Correlations between the Stroop test and other neuropsychological measures (‘Test’ column).
| Test | Measure | Stroop | Stroop interference | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Word reading | Colour naming | Raw | Golden | Relative | Ratio | ||
| MOCA ( | General | ns | ns | ns | |||
| WAISIII digit span ( | Memory attention | ns | ns | ns | ns | ns | |
| Trail making A ( | Attention | ns | ns | ns | ns | ns | |
| SDMT ( | Processing | ns | ns | ns | |||
| COWAT ( | Executive | ns | ns | ||||
| DKEFS 20Q ( | Executive | ns | ns | ns | ns | ns | ns |
Note:
When n is less than 38 is because there was missing data from the neuropsychological test. Executive = Executive function; General = General cognitive function; Processing = Processing speed measure. “ns” = the correlation is not statistically significant.
Correlation between antisaccades measures and Stroop interference scores.
| Anti-saccades | Stroop interference | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Raw | Golden | Relative | Ratio | |
| Errors | ns | ns | ns | ns |
| AS latency | ||||
| Prosaccade latency | ns | ns | ns | |
| Corrective latency | ns | ns | ns | |
Note:
Errors, prosaccades and corrective saccades are defined in the methods section.