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Practice effects in healthy adults: A longitudinal study on frequent repetitive cognitive testing

BACKGROUND: Cognitive deterioration is a core symptom of many neuropsychiatric disorders and target of increasing significance for novel treatment strategies. Hence, its reliable capture in long-term follow-up studies is prerequisite for recording the natural course of diseases and for estimating po...

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Autores principales: Bartels, Claudia, Wegrzyn, Martin, Wiedl, Anne, Ackermann, Verena, Ehrenreich, Hannelore
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2955045/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20846444
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2202-11-118
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author Bartels, Claudia
Wegrzyn, Martin
Wiedl, Anne
Ackermann, Verena
Ehrenreich, Hannelore
author_facet Bartels, Claudia
Wegrzyn, Martin
Wiedl, Anne
Ackermann, Verena
Ehrenreich, Hannelore
author_sort Bartels, Claudia
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Cognitive deterioration is a core symptom of many neuropsychiatric disorders and target of increasing significance for novel treatment strategies. Hence, its reliable capture in long-term follow-up studies is prerequisite for recording the natural course of diseases and for estimating potential benefits of therapeutic interventions. Since repeated neuropsychological testing is required for respective longitudinal study designs, occurrence, time pattern and magnitude of practice effects on cognition have to be understood first under healthy good-performance conditions to enable design optimization and result interpretation in disease trials. METHODS: Healthy adults (N = 36; 47.3 ± 12.0 years; mean IQ 127.0 ± 14.1; 58% males) completed 7 testing sessions, distributed asymmetrically from high to low frequency, over 1 year (baseline, weeks 2-3, 6, 9, months 3, 6, 12). The neuropsychological test battery covered 6 major cognitive domains by several well-established tests each. RESULTS: Most tests exhibited a similar pattern upon repetition: (1) Clinically relevant practice effects during high-frequency testing until month 3 (Cohen's d 0.36-1.19), most pronounced early on, and (2) a performance plateau thereafter upon low-frequency testing. Few tests were non-susceptible to practice or limited by ceiling effects. Influence of confounding variables (age, IQ, personality) was minor. CONCLUSIONS: Practice effects are prominent particularly in the early phase of high-frequency repetitive cognitive testing of healthy well-performing subjects. An optimal combination and timing of tests, as extractable from this study, will aid in controlling their impact. Moreover, normative data for serial testing may now be collected to assess normal learning curves as important comparative readout of pathological cognitive processes.
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spelling pubmed-29550452010-10-15 Practice effects in healthy adults: A longitudinal study on frequent repetitive cognitive testing Bartels, Claudia Wegrzyn, Martin Wiedl, Anne Ackermann, Verena Ehrenreich, Hannelore BMC Neurosci Research Article BACKGROUND: Cognitive deterioration is a core symptom of many neuropsychiatric disorders and target of increasing significance for novel treatment strategies. Hence, its reliable capture in long-term follow-up studies is prerequisite for recording the natural course of diseases and for estimating potential benefits of therapeutic interventions. Since repeated neuropsychological testing is required for respective longitudinal study designs, occurrence, time pattern and magnitude of practice effects on cognition have to be understood first under healthy good-performance conditions to enable design optimization and result interpretation in disease trials. METHODS: Healthy adults (N = 36; 47.3 ± 12.0 years; mean IQ 127.0 ± 14.1; 58% males) completed 7 testing sessions, distributed asymmetrically from high to low frequency, over 1 year (baseline, weeks 2-3, 6, 9, months 3, 6, 12). The neuropsychological test battery covered 6 major cognitive domains by several well-established tests each. RESULTS: Most tests exhibited a similar pattern upon repetition: (1) Clinically relevant practice effects during high-frequency testing until month 3 (Cohen's d 0.36-1.19), most pronounced early on, and (2) a performance plateau thereafter upon low-frequency testing. Few tests were non-susceptible to practice or limited by ceiling effects. Influence of confounding variables (age, IQ, personality) was minor. CONCLUSIONS: Practice effects are prominent particularly in the early phase of high-frequency repetitive cognitive testing of healthy well-performing subjects. An optimal combination and timing of tests, as extractable from this study, will aid in controlling their impact. Moreover, normative data for serial testing may now be collected to assess normal learning curves as important comparative readout of pathological cognitive processes. BioMed Central 2010-09-16 /pmc/articles/PMC2955045/ /pubmed/20846444 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2202-11-118 Text en Copyright ©2010 Bartels et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Bartels, Claudia
Wegrzyn, Martin
Wiedl, Anne
Ackermann, Verena
Ehrenreich, Hannelore
Practice effects in healthy adults: A longitudinal study on frequent repetitive cognitive testing
title Practice effects in healthy adults: A longitudinal study on frequent repetitive cognitive testing
title_full Practice effects in healthy adults: A longitudinal study on frequent repetitive cognitive testing
title_fullStr Practice effects in healthy adults: A longitudinal study on frequent repetitive cognitive testing
title_full_unstemmed Practice effects in healthy adults: A longitudinal study on frequent repetitive cognitive testing
title_short Practice effects in healthy adults: A longitudinal study on frequent repetitive cognitive testing
title_sort practice effects in healthy adults: a longitudinal study on frequent repetitive cognitive testing
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2955045/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20846444
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2202-11-118
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