Neuropsychological profile associated with financial exploitation vulnerability in older adults without dementia.

IF 3 3区 心理学 Q2 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Clinical Neuropsychologist Pub Date : 2024-07-26 DOI:10.1080/13854046.2024.2378526
Aaron C Lim, Gali H Weissberger, Jenna Axelrod, Laura Mosqueda, Annie L Nguyen, Laura Fenton, Daisy Noriega, Camille E Erdman, S Duke Han
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Abstract

Objective: Reports of financial exploitation have steadily increased among older adults. Few studies have examined neuropsychological profiles for individuals vulnerable to financial exploitation, and existing studies have focused on susceptibility to scams, one specific type of financial exploitation. The current study therefore examines whether a general measure of financial exploitation vulnerability is associated with neuropsychological performance in a community sample. Methods: A sample (n = 116) of adults aged 50 or older without dementia completed a laboratory visit that measures physical and psychological functioning and a neuropsychological assessment, the Uniform Data Set-3 (UDS-3) and California Verbal Learning Test-II. Results: After covarying for demographics, current medical problems, financial literacy, and a global cognition screen, financial exploitation vulnerability was negatively associated with scores on the Multilingual Naming Test, Craft Story Recall and Delayed Recall, California Verbal Learning Test-II Delayed Recall and Recognition Discriminability, Phonemic Fluency, and Trails B. Financial exploitation vulnerability was not associated with performance on Digit Span, Semantic Fluency, Benson Complex Figure Recall, or Trails A. Conclusions: Among older adults without dementia, individuals at higher risk for financial exploitation demonstrated worse verbal memory, confrontation naming, phonemic fluency, and set-shifting. These tests are generally sensitive to Default Mode Network functioning and Alzheimer's Disease neuropathology. Longitudinal studies in more impaired samples are warranted to further corroborate and elucidate these relationships.

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与无痴呆症的老年人易受经济剥削有关的神经心理学特征。
目的:有关老年人遭受经济剥削的报告不断增加。很少有研究对容易受到经济剥削的人的神经心理学特征进行研究,现有的研究主要集中在对诈骗的易感性上,而诈骗是经济剥削的一种特殊类型。因此,本研究将在社区样本中考察金融剥削易感性的一般衡量标准是否与神经心理学表现相关。研究方法年龄在 50 岁或 50 岁以上、无痴呆症的成年人样本(n = 116)完成了一项实验室访问,该访问可测量身体和心理功能以及神经心理学评估、统一数据集-3(UDS-3)和加州言语学习测试-II。研究结果在对人口统计学、当前医疗问题、财务知识和全面认知筛查进行协变量分析后,财务剥削脆弱性与多语言命名测试、手工故事回忆和延迟回忆、加州语言学习测试-II延迟回忆和识别辨别能力、语音流畅性和路径B的得分呈负相关;财务剥削脆弱性与数字跨度、语义流畅性、本森复杂图形回忆或路径A的表现无关:在没有痴呆症的老年人中,经济剥削风险较高的人在言语记忆、对抗命名、语音流畅性和集合转换方面表现较差。这些测试通常对默认模式网络功能和阿尔茨海默病的神经病理学很敏感。为了进一步证实和阐明这些关系,有必要对更多受损样本进行纵向研究。
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来源期刊
Clinical Neuropsychologist
Clinical Neuropsychologist 医学-临床神经学
CiteScore
8.40
自引率
12.80%
发文量
61
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Clinical Neuropsychologist (TCN) serves as the premier forum for (1) state-of-the-art clinically-relevant scientific research, (2) in-depth professional discussions of matters germane to evidence-based practice, and (3) clinical case studies in neuropsychology. Of particular interest are papers that can make definitive statements about a given topic (thereby having implications for the standards of clinical practice) and those with the potential to expand today’s clinical frontiers. Research on all age groups, and on both clinical and normal populations, is considered.
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