Working memory and attention in alcoholic Korsakoff's Syndrome : A pilot study

Type of content
Theses / Dissertations
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Thesis discipline
Degree name
Master of Arts
Publisher
University of Canterbury. Psychology
Journal Title
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Volume Title
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Date
1995
Authors
Goodson, Sarah
Abstract

Two males with a suspected diagnosis of Alcoholic Korsakoff's Syndrome (AKS) were recruited along with two age, education-matched alcoholic controls and two comparable non-alcoholic controls. The AKS subjects were recruited on the basis of a history of alcohol abuse and anecdotal evidence to suggest memory impairment. Psychometric testing (WAIS-R, WMS-R and the NART) provided evidence to suggest that one subject was probably AKS while in the other the diagnosis was unlikely. Divided attention within the context of Baddeley's (1992) model of working memory was investigated with a modified Brown-Peterson task, in which a range of distracters were used. A task that involves sustained attention, Inspection Time, was also employed to assess whether the alcoholic subjects had a global attention impairment. The release from proactive interference task was employed as it is suggested that the Brown-Peterson impairments and failure to release from proactive interference seen in some cognitively impaired alcoholics, particularly AKS patients are due to a common underlying pathology (involving frontal lobe dysfunction). While the sample was too small to make any strong conclusions, it is suggested that cognitive dysfunction as a result of alcohol abuse, and not AKS per se, may be a factor in the impaired performance in the Brown-Peterson task. Overall performance in the release from PI was poor in the two suspected AKS subjects. The present study also highlights problems obtaining "clinically diagnosed" AKS subjects and sufficient numbers to warrant group-based experimental work.

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Ngā upoko tukutuku/Māori subject headings
ANZSRC fields of research
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Copyright Sarah Goodson