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Posttraumatic stress disorder is associated with limited executive resources in a working memory task
Authors:Nikki Honzel  Timothy Justus  Diane Swick
Affiliation:1. Medical Research Service, VA Northern California Health Care System, 150 Muir Road, Ste. 151-I, Martinez, CA, USA
2. Psychology Field Group, Pitzer College, Claremont, CA, USA
3. Department of Neurology, University of California Davis, Davis, CA, USA
Abstract:Patients with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) can show declines in working memory. A dual-task design was used to determine whether these impairments are linked to executive control limitations. Participants performed a Sternberg memory task with either one or four letters. In the dual-task condition, the maintenance period was filled with an arrow flanker task. PTSD patients were less accurate on the working memory task than were controls, especially in the dual-task condition. In the single-task condition, both groups showed similar patterns of brain potentials from 300 to 500 ms when discriminating old and new probes. However, when taxed with an additional task, the event-related potentials (ERPs) of the PTSD group no longer differentiated old and new probes. In contrast, interference resolution processes in both the single- and dual-task conditions of the flanker task were intact. The lack of differentiation in the ERPs reflects impaired working memory performance under more difficult, dual-task conditions. Exacerbated difficulty in performing a working memory task with concurrent task demands suggests a specific limitation in executive control resources in PTSD.
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