Effect of aging, education, reading and writing, semantic processing and depression symptoms on verbal fluency

Verbal fluency tasks are widely used in (clinical) neuropsychology to evaluate components of executive functioning and lexical-semantic processing (linguistic and semantic memory). Performance in those tasks may be affected by several variables, such as age, education and diseases. This study invest...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Psicologia, reflexão e crítica Vol. 26; no. 4; pp. 680 - 690
Main Authors: Moraes, André Luiz, Guimarães, Luciano S. P., Joanette, Yves, Parente, Maria Alice de Mattos Pimenta, Fonseca, Rochele Paz, Almeida, Rosa Maria Martins de
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Porto Alegre Springer Nature B.V 01-01-2013
Curso de Pós-Graduação em Psicologia da Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul
SpringerOpen
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Summary:Verbal fluency tasks are widely used in (clinical) neuropsychology to evaluate components of executive functioning and lexical-semantic processing (linguistic and semantic memory). Performance in those tasks may be affected by several variables, such as age, education and diseases. This study investigated whether aging, education, reading and writing frequency, performance in semantic judgment tasks and depression symptoms predict the performance in unconstrained, phonemic and semantic fluency tasks. This study sample comprised 260 healthy adults aged 19 to 75 years old. The Pearson correlation coefficient and multiple regression models were used for data analysis. The variables under analysis were associated in different ways and had different levels of contribution according to the type of verbal fluency task. Education had the greatest effect on verbal fluency tasks. There was a greater effect of age on semantic fluency than on phonemic tasks. The semantic judgment tasks predicted the verbal fluency performance alone or in combination with other variables. These findings corroborate the importance of education in cognition supporting the hypothesis of a cognitive reserve and confirming the contribution of lexical-semantic processing to verbal fluency.
ISSN:0102-7972
1678-7153
1678-7153
DOI:10.1590/S0102-79722013000400008