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Assessing within-task verbal fluency performance: the utility of individual time intervals in predicting incident mild cognitive impairment

Sydney Jacobs, Giulia Mercuri, Roee Holtzer

2020Aging Neuropsychology and Cognition19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The current study aimed to determine whether word generation performance on individual within-task 20-second time intervals predicted conversion to Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) status. Longitudinal data (Mean follow-up=2.95±1.64 years) was collected from cognitively-healthy community-dwelling older adults (N=344; %female=56.1). Performance on letter and semantic fluency tasks was divided into three consecutive within-task 20-second intervals. Incident MCI status (n=50) was determined via established diagnostic case conference. Fully adjusted Cox proportional-hazards regression models revealed that greater word production on semantic fluency across all time intervals significantly predicted a reduced risk of incident MCI [0-20 seconds (HR=0.906, p=0.002), 21-40 seconds (HR=0.904, p=0.02), and 41-60 seconds (HR=0.892, p=0.017)]. Conversely, on letter fluency, greater word production within the 41-60 second time interval only was significantly associated with reduced risk of incident MCI (HR=0.886, p=0.002). Overall, the clinical use of within-interval performance is supported given evidence of predictive sensitivity and ease of administration.

Topics & Concepts

Verbal fluency testFluencyAudiologyCognitionPsychologyTask (project management)MedicineConfidence intervalProportional hazards modelNeuropsychologyInternal medicinePsychiatryEconomicsManagementMathematics educationDementia and Cognitive Impairment ResearchFrailty in Older AdultsNeurobiology of Language and Bilingualism
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