Cosentino Stephanie, Metcalfe Janet, Butterfield Brady, Stern Yaakov
Cognitive Neuroscience Division, Taub Institute, Columbia University Medical Center, New York, NY 10032, USA.
Cortex. 2007 Oct;43(7):1004-19. doi: 10.1016/s0010-9452(08)70697-x.
For reasons that remain unknown, there is marked inter-person variability in awareness of episodic memory loss in patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD). Existing research designs, primarily subjective in nature, have been at a relative disadvantage for evaluating disordered metamemory and its relation to the clinical and neuropathological heterogeneity of AD, as well as its prognosis for various disease outcomes. The current study sought to establish an objective means of evaluating metamemory in AD by modifying traditional metacognitive paradigms in which participants are asked to make predictions regarding their own memory performance. Variables derived from this measure were analyzed in relation to clinically rated awareness for memory loss. As predicted, a range of awareness levels existed across patients with mild to moderate AD (n=24) and clinical ratings of awareness (CRA) were significantly associated with verbal episodic memory monitoring (r = .46, p = .03). Further, patients who were rated as aware of their memory loss remained well calibrated over the course of the task whereas those rated as relatively unaware grew over-confident in their predictions [F (1, 33) = 4.19, p = .02]. Findings suggest that over-confidence may be related to impaired online error recognition and compromised use of metamemory strategies such as the Memory for Past Test (MPT) heuristic. Importantly, clinically rated awareness did not vary as a function of demographic variables, global cognition, or verbal memory. However, participants characterized as relatively unaware were impaired on a nonverbal memory task as compared to aware participants [F (1, 20) = 6.98, p = .02]. The current study provides preliminary support for the use of a recognition-based verbal episodic memory monitoring task as a quantitative measure of awareness for memory loss in AD, and offers insight into the manner in which metamemory breaks down. Discrepancies in nonverbal memory across the two awareness groups provide preliminary support for the idea that metamemory variability in AD may be related to the neuroanatomic presentation of the disease, with disordered awareness potentially reflective of a critical level of right hemisphere involvement.
出于尚不清楚的原因,阿尔茨海默病(AD)患者在情景记忆丧失的认知方面存在显著的个体差异。现有的研究设计本质上主要是主观的,在评估紊乱的元记忆及其与AD临床和神经病理学异质性的关系,以及其对各种疾病结局的预后方面相对处于劣势。当前的研究试图通过修改传统的元认知范式来建立一种评估AD中元记忆的客观方法,在传统范式中,参与者被要求对自己的记忆表现进行预测。从该测量中得出的变量与临床评定的记忆丧失认知进行了分析。正如预期的那样,轻度至中度AD患者(n = 24)存在一系列认知水平,并且认知的临床评定(CRA)与言语情景记忆监测显著相关(r = 0.46,p = 0.03)。此外,被评定为意识到自己记忆丧失的患者在任务过程中保持良好的校准,而那些被评定为相对未意识到的患者在预测中变得过度自信[F(1, 33)= 4.19,p = 0.02]。研究结果表明,过度自信可能与在线错误识别受损以及诸如过去测试记忆(MPT)启发式等元记忆策略的使用受损有关。重要的是,临床评定的认知并未随人口统计学变量、整体认知或言语记忆而变化。然而,与意识到的参与者相比,被描述为相对未意识到的参与者在非言语记忆任务上存在受损[F(1, 20)= 6.98,p = 0.02]。当前的研究为使用基于识别的言语情景记忆监测任务作为AD中记忆丧失认知的定量测量提供了初步支持,并深入了解了元记忆瓦解的方式。两个认知组在非言语记忆方面的差异为以下观点提供了初步支持,即AD中的元记忆变异性可能与疾病的神经解剖学表现有关,紊乱的认知可能反映了右半球受累的关键程度。