Modeling and estimating recall processing capacity: Sensitivity and diagnostic utility in application to mild cognitive impairment |
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Authors: | Michael J. Wenger Selamawit Negash Lyndsay Petersen |
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Affiliation: | a The Pennsylvania State University, United States b Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, United States |
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Abstract: | We investigate the potential for using latency-based measures of retrieval processing capacity to assess changes in performance specific to individuals with mild cognitive impairment (MCI), a reliable precursor state to Alzheimer’s Disease. Use of these capacity measures is motivated in part by exploration of the effects of atrophy on a computational model of a basic hippocampal circuit. We use this model to suggest that capacity may be a more sensitive indicator of the underlying atrophy than speed of processing, and test this hypothesis by adapting a standard behavioral measure of memory (the free and cued selective reminding test, FCSRT) to allow for the collection of cued recall latencies. Participants were drawn from five groups: college-aged, middle-aged, healthy elderly, those with a diagnosis of MCI, and a sample of MCI control participants. The measure of capacity is shown to offer increased classificatory sensitivity relative to the standard behavioral measures, and is also shown to be the behavioral measure that correlated most strongly with hippocampal volume. |
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Keywords: | Processing capacity Memory Aging Alzheimer&rsquo s disease Mild cognitive impairment Reaction times |
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