Mioni Giovanna, Román-Caballero Rafael, Clerici Jacopo, Capizzi Mariagrazia
Department of General Psychology, University of Padova, Italy.
Mind, Brain and Behavior Research Center (CIMCYC), University of Granada, Spain; Department of Experimental Psychology, University of Granada, Spain.
Behav Brain Res. 2021 Jul 23;410:113354. doi: 10.1016/j.bbr.2021.113354. Epub 2021 May 11.
Performance on timing tasks changes with age. Whether these changes reflect a real "clock" problem due to aging or a secondary effect of the reduced cognitive resources of older adults is still an unsettled question. Research on processing of time in aged populations marked by severe mnemonic and/or attentional deficits, such as patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) and Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI), may help elucidate the role of cognitive resources in age-related temporal distortions. To this end, we conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis of timing studies in AD and MCI patients; both prospective and retrospective timing tasks were considered and analysed separately. As concerns prospective timing, a first random-effect model showed a medium overall effect of neurodegeneration on timing performance. When considering the role of moderator variables(i.e., neurodegenerative condition, type of measure, participants' age and years of education, interval length, and type of timing task), mean score appeared to be a less sensitive measure than accuracy and variability, and the observed temporal impairment was smaller in older samples. In addition, AD patients only exhibited medium-to-high impairment on prospective timing tasks, whereas MCI patients did not significantly differ from controls. However, assuming a mean age of 70 years old and absolute error as dependent variable, a second fitted meta-regression model predicted a significant outcome also for MCI patients. Concerning retrospective timing, a significant but small effect of neurodegeneration was observed for retrospective judgments. None of the moderators, however, explained between-studies variability. Collectively, our findings highlight a clear deficit in prospective timing for AD patients and underscore several issues that future work should carefully consider to better investigate the effect of MCI on prospective temporal judgements. Results from retrospective timing also point to a possible impairment of retrospective judgments in neurodegenerative conditions, albeit more studies are needed to substantiate this finding.
计时任务的表现会随着年龄而变化。这些变化是反映了因衰老导致的真正“时钟”问题,还是老年人认知资源减少的次要影响,仍是一个未解决的问题。对患有严重记忆和/或注意力缺陷的老年人群(如阿尔茨海默病(AD)和轻度认知障碍(MCI)患者)的时间处理研究,可能有助于阐明认知资源在与年龄相关的时间扭曲中的作用。为此,我们对AD和MCI患者的计时研究进行了系统综述和荟萃分析;前瞻性和回顾性计时任务均被考虑并分别进行分析。关于前瞻性计时,第一个随机效应模型显示神经退行性变对计时表现有中等程度的总体影响。在考虑调节变量(即神经退行性疾病状况、测量类型、参与者年龄和受教育年限、间隔长度以及计时任务类型)的作用时,平均得分似乎不如准确性和变异性敏感,并且在年龄较大的样本中观察到的时间损害较小。此外,AD患者仅在前瞻性计时任务上表现出中度至高度损害,而MCI患者与对照组没有显著差异。然而,假设平均年龄为70岁并将绝对误差作为因变量,第二个拟合的元回归模型预测MCI患者也会有显著结果。关于回顾性计时,观察到神经退行性变对回顾性判断有显著但较小的影响。然而,没有一个调节变量能够解释研究间的变异性。总体而言,我们的研究结果突出了AD患者在前瞻性计时方面存在明显缺陷,并强调了未来研究为更好地调查MCI对前瞻性时间判断的影响应仔细考虑的几个问题。回顾性计时的结果也表明在神经退行性疾病中回顾性判断可能存在损害,尽管需要更多研究来证实这一发现。