A behavioural and electrophysiological investigation of cognitive and executive dysfunction in older adults with Williams syndrome

Williams syndrome (WS) is a rare developmental disorder accompanied by mild–moderate learning difficulties. The literature focusing on older adults with WS is limited, thus the thesis examined cognitive and executive dysfunction in adults with WS aged 35+ years, adopting behavioural and electrophysi...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Greer, Joanna
Other Authors: Riby, Leigh ; Riby, Debbie ; Hamilton, Colin
Published: Northumbria University 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.713864
id ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-713864
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-7138642018-09-05T03:29:44ZA behavioural and electrophysiological investigation of cognitive and executive dysfunction in older adults with Williams syndromeGreer, JoannaRiby, Leigh ; Riby, Debbie ; Hamilton, Colin2016Williams syndrome (WS) is a rare developmental disorder accompanied by mild–moderate learning difficulties. The literature focusing on older adults with WS is limited, thus the thesis examined cognitive and executive dysfunction in adults with WS aged 35+ years, adopting behavioural and electrophysiological methodologies. Claims of premature cognitive ageing, investigated with paired-associates paradigms to measure associative memory ability (Chapter 2), were not supported, rather they highlighted atypicalities capitalising on semantic memory and implementing spontaneous semantic encoding strategies. Further investigation of semantic memory (Levels of Processing paradigm, Chapter 3) showed better recall for ‘deep’ encoded items; however, effect sizes identified atypical access to semantic memory. Importantly, both studies were characterised with greater false alarms and reaction time for rejecting new items, indicative of poor error monitoring, and deficits in executive processes of inhibitory control and attention in WS. Chapter 4 adopted The Sustained Attention to Response Task which is highly sensitive to inhibition and attentional lapse. The WS group showed inhibitory deficits failing to withhold a response, and problems re-engaging attentional control after making an error. Chapters 5 and 6 investigated the neural mechanisms underpinning attentional / inhibitory deficits, employing the Oddball paradigm (ERP), and analysis of the alpha and beta frequency bands during resting states (EEG). The WS group showed a) compromised early monitoring of perceptual input, and inefficient task irrelevant stimulus evaluation, and b) low EEG alpha power indicative of reduced inhibitory control, atypical topographical distributions, and low variability; the latter is associated with poorer behavioural performance. Overall, the thesis has demonstrated how cognitive deficits observed in older adults with WS are grounded in atypicalities in the executive processes of attention and inhibition. It has added to theoretical understanding by advancing our knowledge of both the behavioural and eletrophysiological profiles in older adults with WS, and which sub-serve these atypicalities.618.97C800 PsychologyNorthumbria Universityhttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.713864http://nrl.northumbria.ac.uk/30250/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 618.97
C800 Psychology
spellingShingle 618.97
C800 Psychology
Greer, Joanna
A behavioural and electrophysiological investigation of cognitive and executive dysfunction in older adults with Williams syndrome
description Williams syndrome (WS) is a rare developmental disorder accompanied by mild–moderate learning difficulties. The literature focusing on older adults with WS is limited, thus the thesis examined cognitive and executive dysfunction in adults with WS aged 35+ years, adopting behavioural and electrophysiological methodologies. Claims of premature cognitive ageing, investigated with paired-associates paradigms to measure associative memory ability (Chapter 2), were not supported, rather they highlighted atypicalities capitalising on semantic memory and implementing spontaneous semantic encoding strategies. Further investigation of semantic memory (Levels of Processing paradigm, Chapter 3) showed better recall for ‘deep’ encoded items; however, effect sizes identified atypical access to semantic memory. Importantly, both studies were characterised with greater false alarms and reaction time for rejecting new items, indicative of poor error monitoring, and deficits in executive processes of inhibitory control and attention in WS. Chapter 4 adopted The Sustained Attention to Response Task which is highly sensitive to inhibition and attentional lapse. The WS group showed inhibitory deficits failing to withhold a response, and problems re-engaging attentional control after making an error. Chapters 5 and 6 investigated the neural mechanisms underpinning attentional / inhibitory deficits, employing the Oddball paradigm (ERP), and analysis of the alpha and beta frequency bands during resting states (EEG). The WS group showed a) compromised early monitoring of perceptual input, and inefficient task irrelevant stimulus evaluation, and b) low EEG alpha power indicative of reduced inhibitory control, atypical topographical distributions, and low variability; the latter is associated with poorer behavioural performance. Overall, the thesis has demonstrated how cognitive deficits observed in older adults with WS are grounded in atypicalities in the executive processes of attention and inhibition. It has added to theoretical understanding by advancing our knowledge of both the behavioural and eletrophysiological profiles in older adults with WS, and which sub-serve these atypicalities.
author2 Riby, Leigh ; Riby, Debbie ; Hamilton, Colin
author_facet Riby, Leigh ; Riby, Debbie ; Hamilton, Colin
Greer, Joanna
author Greer, Joanna
author_sort Greer, Joanna
title A behavioural and electrophysiological investigation of cognitive and executive dysfunction in older adults with Williams syndrome
title_short A behavioural and electrophysiological investigation of cognitive and executive dysfunction in older adults with Williams syndrome
title_full A behavioural and electrophysiological investigation of cognitive and executive dysfunction in older adults with Williams syndrome
title_fullStr A behavioural and electrophysiological investigation of cognitive and executive dysfunction in older adults with Williams syndrome
title_full_unstemmed A behavioural and electrophysiological investigation of cognitive and executive dysfunction in older adults with Williams syndrome
title_sort behavioural and electrophysiological investigation of cognitive and executive dysfunction in older adults with williams syndrome
publisher Northumbria University
publishDate 2016
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.713864
work_keys_str_mv AT greerjoanna abehaviouralandelectrophysiologicalinvestigationofcognitiveandexecutivedysfunctioninolderadultswithwilliamssyndrome
AT greerjoanna behaviouralandelectrophysiologicalinvestigationofcognitiveandexecutivedysfunctioninolderadultswithwilliamssyndrome
_version_ 1718730222072758272