9 Exploration of Predictors of Cognitive Flexibility Performance in Long-Term Survivors of Childhood Brain Tumor

IF 2.6 4区 心理学 Q2 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society Pub Date : 2023-12-22 DOI:10.1017/s1355617723000929
Holly A Aleksonis, Naveen Thourani, Tricia Z King
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Abstract

Objective:Survivors of childhood brain tumor are historically thought to perform worse on measures of executive functioning, including cognitive flexibility (CF; e.g., set-shifting), when compared to their peers. Commonly utilized measures, such as subtests from the Delis-Kaplan Executive Function System (D-KEFS), have baseline conditions that attempt to measure performances independent of but critical for CF tasks (e.g., motor speed on trail making, letter fluency on verbal fluency). However, in research, conditions measuring CF are often included in analyses without accounting for these important baseline conditions. The aim of the current study is to explore differences in CF performance between survivors and their healthy peers when controlling for baseline conditions. The variance explained by each baseline condition on CF condition performance in survivors is also explored.Participants and Methods:A sample of 107 long-term survivors of childhood brain tumor (Mage=21.81, SD=5.99, 50.5% female) and 142 healthy controls (Mage= 23.25, SD=6.61, 61.3% female) were administered the Trail Making Test (TMT), Color-Word Interference (CWI), and Verbal Fluency (VF) subtests from the D-KEFS. For the TMT, baseline conditions include visually scanning for a target, motor speed, and letter and number sequencing. For the CWI subtest, baseline conditions include rapid color naming, word reading, and reading words in a different colored ink. On the VF subtest, baseline conditions include rapidly naming words with a specific letter and from a specific category. An analysis of covariance was conducted for each subtest to determine if groups differed in performance on the CF condition (i.e., Number-Letter Switching, Inhibition/Switching, Category Switching Accuracy) when controlling for baseline conditions. In survivors only, linear regressions investigated the amount of variance explained by each baseline condition on the CF conditions of each subtest.Results:Groups did not differ in CF performance of each subtest when controlling for baseline conditions (ps>.10). Across subtests, baseline conditions significantly predicted CF performance in survivors. On the TMT, Letter Sequencing (p=.003, unique-R2=.05), but not Visual Scanning, Number Sequencing, or Motor Speed, was a significant predictor of Number-Letter Sequencing performance (p<.001, R2=.50). On the CWI subtest, Word Reading (p<.001, unique-R2=.09) and Inhibition (p<.001, unique-R2=.05), but not Color Naming, were significant predictors of Inhibition/Switching performance (p<.001, R2=.67). On the VF subtest, Letter Fluency (p=.009, unique-R2=.06) and Category Fluency (p<.001, unique-R2=.08) were significant predictors of Category Switching Accuracy performance (p<.001, R2=.37).Conclusions:Findings suggest that CF may not differ between survivors and their healthy peers, but that other factors of executive functioning, such as processing speed, drive performance differences on measures of CF. As these tasks rely heavily on speed, survivors may be slower than their healthy counterparts, but may not perform worse on set-shifting. In addition, these results highlight the importance of controlling for lower-order processes in analyses to help isolate CF performance and more accurately characterize potential differences between groups. While replication of findings in survivors and other clinical groups (e.g., congenital heart disease, traumatic brain injury) is still needed, this work can help inform which processes are most important to account for, which is not yet established.
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9 儿童脑肿瘤长期存活者认知灵活性表现的预测因素探索
目的:人们历来认为,与同龄人相比,儿童脑肿瘤幸存者在执行功能(包括认知灵活性(CF;如集合转换))方面的表现较差。常用的测量方法,如德利斯-卡普兰执行功能系统(D-KEFS)的子测试,都有基线条件,试图测量独立于CF任务但对CF任务至关重要的表现(例如,制作路径时的运动速度、言语流畅性时的字母流畅性)。然而,在研究中,测量 CF 的条件往往被纳入分析,而不考虑这些重要的基线条件。本研究旨在探讨在控制基线条件的情况下,幸存者与健康人在 CF 表现上的差异。参与者和方法:研究人员对 107 名儿童脑肿瘤长期幸存者(年龄为 21.81 岁,平均年龄为 5.99 岁,女性占 50.5%)和 142 名健康对照者(年龄为 23.25 岁,平均年龄为 6.61 岁,女性占 61.3%)进行了 D-KEFS 中的 "寻迹测试"(TMT)、"颜色-文字干扰"(CWI)和 "言语流畅性"(VF)子测试。在 TMT 测试中,基线条件包括视觉扫描目标、运动速度、字母和数字排序。在 CWI 分测验中,基线条件包括快速颜色命名、单词阅读和阅读不同颜色墨水中的单词。在 VF 子测试中,基线条件包括快速说出带有特定字母和特定类别的单词。我们对每个子测试进行了协方差分析,以确定在控制基线条件的情况下,各组在 CF 条件(即数字-字母转换、抑制/转换、类别转换准确性)上的表现是否存在差异。仅在幸存者中,线性回归调查了每个基线条件对每个子测试的 CF 条件所解释的变异量。结果:在控制基线条件的情况下,各组在每个子测试的 CF 成绩上没有差异(ps> .10)。在所有分测验中,基线条件对幸存者的 CF 成绩有显著的预测作用。在TMT测试中,字母排序(p=.003,唯一R2=.05)是数字-字母排序成绩的重要预测因素(p<.001,R2=.50),而不是视觉扫描、数字排序或运动速度。在 CWI 分测验中,单词阅读(p<.001, unique-R2=.09)和抑制(p<.001, unique-R2=.05)对抑制/转换成绩有显著的预测作用(p<.001, R2=.67),而对颜色命名没有显著的预测作用(p<.001, R2=.67)。在VF子测试中,字母流畅度(p=.009,unique-R2=.06)和类别流畅度(p<.001,unique-R2=.08)是类别切换准确性成绩(p<.001,R2=.37)的重要预测因素。由于这些任务在很大程度上依赖于速度,因此幸存者的速度可能比健康人慢,但在集群转移方面的表现可能并不差。此外,这些结果还强调了在分析中控制低阶过程的重要性,以帮助分离 CF 表现并更准确地描述组间的潜在差异。虽然仍需在幸存者和其他临床群体(如先天性心脏病、创伤性脑损伤)中复制研究结果,但这项工作有助于了解哪些过程是最需要考虑的,而这一点尚未确定。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.40
自引率
3.80%
发文量
185
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society is the official journal of the International Neuropsychological Society, an organization of over 4,500 international members from a variety of disciplines. The Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society welcomes original, creative, high quality research papers covering all areas of neuropsychology. The focus of articles may be primarily experimental, applied, or clinical. Contributions will broadly reflect the interest of all areas of neuropsychology, including but not limited to: development of cognitive processes, brain-behavior relationships, adult and pediatric neuropsychology, neurobehavioral syndromes (such as aphasia or apraxia), and the interfaces of neuropsychology with related areas such as behavioral neurology, neuropsychiatry, genetics, and cognitive neuroscience. Papers that utilize behavioral, neuroimaging, and electrophysiological measures are appropriate. To assure maximum flexibility and to promote diverse mechanisms of scholarly communication, the following formats are available in addition to a Regular Research Article: Brief Communication is a shorter research article; Rapid Communication is intended for "fast breaking" new work that does not yet justify a full length article and is placed on a fast review track; Case Report is a theoretically important and unique case study; Critical Review and Short Review are thoughtful considerations of topics of importance to neuropsychology and include meta-analyses; Dialogue provides a forum for publishing two distinct positions on controversial issues in a point-counterpoint format; Special Issue and Special Section consist of several articles linked thematically; Letter to the Editor responds to recent articles published in the Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society; and Book Review, which is considered but is no longer solicited.
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