Westwater H, McDowall J, Siegert R, Mossman S, Abernethy D
School of Psychology, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand.
J Clin Exp Neuropsychol. 1998 Jun;20(3):413-8. doi: 10.1076/jcen.20.3.413.826.
Evidence suggests that patients suffering from Parkinson's Disease (PD) demonstrate less sequence learning in the serial reaction time (SRT) task devised by Nissen and Bullemer (1987). One of the problems with this task is that it is motor intensive and, given the motor difficulties which characterize Parkinson's disease (e.g., tremor, impaired facility of movement, rigidity, and loss of postural reflexes), allows the possibility that patients with PD are capable of sequence learning but are simply unable to demonstrate this through a decrease in reaction time over trials. The present study examined the performance of patients with PD and healthy controls, matched for verbal fluency, on a verbal version of the SRT task where the standard button-pressing response was replaced by a spoken response. Thirteen nondementing patients with PD and 11 healthy controls were administered the SRT task. The PD group demonstrated less sequence learning than the controls and this was independent of age and severity of illness. The results add support to those studies which have found impaired sequence learning using the standard form of the SRT task.
有证据表明,帕金森病(PD)患者在由尼森和布勒默(1987年)设计的序列反应时(SRT)任务中表现出较少的序列学习能力。该任务的一个问题是它对运动要求较高,而且鉴于帕金森病的运动困难特征(例如震颤、运动能力受损、僵硬和姿势反射丧失),有可能PD患者具备序列学习能力,但只是无法通过试验中反应时间的减少来表现出来。本研究考察了在言语流畅性方面相匹配的PD患者和健康对照在言语版SRT任务中的表现,其中标准的按键反应被言语反应所取代。对13名无痴呆的PD患者和11名健康对照进行了SRT任务测试。PD组的序列学习能力低于对照组,且这与年龄和疾病严重程度无关。这些结果为那些发现使用标准形式的SRT任务时序列学习受损的研究提供了支持。