학술논문

Accelerated Long-Term Forgetting: Prolonged Delayed Recognition as Sensitive Measurement for Different Profiles of Long-Term Memory and Metacognitive Confidence in Stroke Patients.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society. Apr2022, Vol. 28 Issue 4, p327-336. 10p.
Subject
*LONG-term memory
*STROKE patients
*RECOLLECTION (Psychology)
*EPISODIC memory
*RECOGNITION (Psychology)
*MEMORY disorders
Language
ISSN
1355-6177
Abstract
Objective: Deficits in episodic memory are frequently reported after ischemic stroke. In standard clinical care, episodic memory is assessed after a 20–30 min delay, with abnormal memory decay over this period being characterized as rapid forgetting (RF). Previous studies have shown abnormal forgetting over a prolonged interval (days to weeks) despite normal acquisition, referred to as accelerated long-term forgetting (ALF). Method: We examined whether ALF is present in stroke patients (N = 91) using immediate testing (T1), testing after a short delay (20–30 min, T2), and testing after a prolonged delay (one week, T3). Based on performance compared to matched controls (N = 85), patients were divided into (1) patients without forgetting, (2) patients with RF between T1 and T2, and (3) patients with ALF at T3. Furthermore, confidence ratings were assessed. Results: ALF was present in a moderate amount of stroke patients (17%), but ALF was even more prevalent in our stroke sample than RF after a 20–30 min delay (which was found in only 13% of our patients). Patients reported a lower confidence for their responses, independent of their actual performance. Conclusions: Adding a one-week delayed measurement may potentially assist in identifying patients with memory decrements that may otherwise go undetected. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]