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Assessing Error Awareness as a Mediator of the Relationship between Subjective Concerns and Cognitive Performance in Older Adults

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2016

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Public Library of Science
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Buckley, Rachel F., Gemma Laming, Li Peng Evelyn Chen, Alice Crole, and Robert Hester. 2016. “Assessing Error Awareness as a Mediator of the Relationship between Subjective Concerns and Cognitive Performance in Older Adults.” PLoS ONE 11 (11): e0166315. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0166315. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0166315.

Abstract

Objectives: Subjective concerns of cognitive decline (SCD) often manifest in older adults who exhibit objectively normal cognitive functioning. This subjective-objective discrepancy is counter-intuitive when mounting evidence suggests that subjective concerns relate to future clinical progression to Alzheimer’s disease, and so possess the potential to be a sensitive early behavioural marker of disease. In the current study, we aimed to determine whether individual variability in conscious awareness of errors in daily life might mediate this subjective-objective relationship. Methods: 67 cognitively-normal older adults underwent cognitive, SCD and mood tests, and an error awareness task. Results: Poorer error awareness was not found to mediate a relationship between SCD and objective performance. Furthermore, non-clinical levels of depressive symptomatology were a primary driving factor of SCD and error awareness, and significantly mediated a relationship between the two. Discussion We were unable to show that poorer error awareness mediates SCD and cognitive performance in older adults. Our study does suggest, however, that underlying depressive symptoms influence both poorer error awareness and greater SCD severity. Error awareness is thus not recommended as a proxy for SCD, as reduced levels of error awareness do not seem to be reflected by greater SCD.

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Medicine and Health Sciences, Health Care, Health Education and Awareness, People and Places, Population Groupings, Age Groups, Elderly, Mental Health and Psychiatry, Mood Disorders, Depression, Geriatric Depression, Geriatrics, Geriatric Psychiatry, Biology and Life Sciences, Neuroscience, Cognitive Science, Cognition, Memory, Learning and Memory, Dementia, Alzheimer Disease, Neurology, Neurodegenerative Diseases, Cognitive Psychology, Learning, Psychology, Social Sciences, Demography

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