Preserved performance by cerebellar patients on tests of word generation, discrimination learning, and attention

被引:63
作者
Helmuth, LI [1 ]
Ivry, RB [1 ]
Shimizu, N [1 ]
机构
[1] UNIV CALIF BERKELEY, DEPT PSYCHOL, BERKELEY, CA 94720 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1101/lm.3.6.456
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Recent theories suggest that the human cerebellum may contribute to the performance of cognitive tasks. We tested a group of adult patients with cerebellar damage attributable to stroke, tumor, or atrophy on four experiments involving verbal learning or attention shifting. In experiment 1, a verb generation task, participants produced semantically related verbs when presented with a list of nouns. With successive blocks of practice responding to the same set of stimuli, both groups, including a subset of cerebellar patients with unilateral right hemisphere lesions, improved their response times. In experiment 2, a verbal discrimination task, participants learned by trial and error to pick the target words from a set of word pairs. When age was taken into account, there were no performance differences between cerebellar patients and control subjects. In experiment 3, measures of spatial attention shifting were obtained under both exogenous and endogenous cueing conditions, Cerebellar patients and control subjects showed similar costs and benefits in both cueing conditions and at all SOAs. In experiment 4, intra- and interdimensional shifts of nonspatial attention were elicited by presenting word cues before the appearance of a target. Performance was substantially similar for cerebellar patients and control subjects. These results are presented as a cautionary note. The experiments failed to provide support for current hypotheses regarding the role of the cerebellum in verbal learning or attention. Alternative interpretations of previous results are discussed.
引用
收藏
页码:456 / 474
页数:19
相关论文
共 53 条
[1]   A NEW ROLE FOR THE CEREBELLUM IN COGNITIVE OPERATIONS [J].
AKSHOOMOFF, NA ;
COURCHESNE, E .
BEHAVIORAL NEUROSCIENCE, 1992, 106 (05) :731-738
[2]   ERP EVIDENCE FOR A SHIFTING ATTENTION-DEFICIT IN PATIENTS WITH DAMAGE TO THE CEREBELLUM [J].
AKSHOOMOFF, NA ;
COURCHESNE, E .
JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE, 1994, 6 (04) :388-399
[3]   CONTRIBUTION OF THE CEREBELLUM TO NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL FUNCTIONING - EVIDENCE FROM A CASE OF CEREBELLAR DEGENERATIVE DISORDER [J].
AKSHOOMOFF, NA ;
COURCHESNE, E ;
PRESS, GA ;
IRAGUI, V .
NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA, 1992, 30 (04) :315-328
[4]   MEMORY IN PATIENTS WITH CEREBELLAR DEGENERATION [J].
APPOLLONIO, IM ;
GRAFMAN, J ;
SCHWARTZ, V ;
MASSAQUOI, S ;
HALLETT, M .
NEUROLOGY, 1993, 43 (08) :1536-1544
[5]   Dissociation of storage and rehearsal in verbal working memory: Evidence from positron emission tomography [J].
Awh, E ;
Jonides, J ;
Smith, EE ;
Schumacher, EH ;
Koeppe, RA ;
Katz, S .
PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE, 1996, 7 (01) :25-31
[6]   NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL CHANGES IN OLIVOPONTOCEREBELLAR ATROPHY [J].
BERENT, S ;
GIORDANI, B ;
GILMAN, S ;
JUNCK, L ;
LEHTINEN, S ;
MARKEL, DS ;
BOIVIN, M ;
KLUIN, KJ ;
PARKS, R ;
KOEPPE, RA .
ARCHIVES OF NEUROLOGY, 1990, 47 (09) :997-1001
[7]   THE CEREBELLUM CONTRIBUTES TO MENTAL SKILLS [J].
BRACKETOLKMITT, R ;
LINDEN, A ;
CANAVAN, AGM ;
ROCKSTROH, B ;
SCHOLZ, E ;
WESSEL, K ;
DIENER, HC .
BEHAVIORAL NEUROSCIENCE, 1989, 103 (02) :442-446
[8]   CONDITIONAL ASSOCIATIVE LEARNING IS IMPAIRED IN CEREBELLAR DISEASE IN HUMANS [J].
CANAVAN, AGM ;
SPRENGELMEYER, R ;
DIENER, HC ;
HOMBERG, V .
BEHAVIORAL NEUROSCIENCE, 1994, 108 (03) :475-485
[9]   THE CASE FOR SINGLE-PATIENT STUDIES [J].
CARAMAZZA, A ;
MCCLOSKEY, M .
COGNITIVE NEUROPSYCHOLOGY, 1988, 5 (05) :517-527
[10]  
CORBETTA M, 1993, J NEUROSCI, V13, P1202