Cortex
Volume 44, Issue 9 , Pages 1188-1196, October 2008

Clustering and switching processes in semantic verbal fluency in the course of Alzheimer's disease subjects: Results from the PAQUID longitudinal study

  • Nadine Raoux

      Affiliations

    • INSERM, U897, Bordeaux cedex, France
    • University Victor Segalen Bordeaux 2, Bordeaux Cedex, France
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. INSERM, U897, University Victor Segalen Bordeaux 2, 146 rue Léo Saignat, F-33076 Bordeaux Cedex, France.
  • ,
  • Hélène Amieva

      Affiliations

    • INSERM, U897, Bordeaux cedex, France
    • University Victor Segalen Bordeaux 2, Bordeaux Cedex, France
  • ,
  • Mélanie Le Goff

      Affiliations

    • INSERM, U897, Bordeaux cedex, France
    • University Victor Segalen Bordeaux 2, Bordeaux Cedex, France
  • ,
  • Sophie Auriacombe

      Affiliations

    • University Hospital of Bordeaux, France
  • ,
  • Laure Carcaillon

      Affiliations

    • INSERM, U897, Bordeaux cedex, France
    • University Victor Segalen Bordeaux 2, Bordeaux Cedex, France
  • ,
  • Luc Letenneur

      Affiliations

    • INSERM, U897, Bordeaux cedex, France
    • University Victor Segalen Bordeaux 2, Bordeaux Cedex, France
  • ,
  • Jean-François Dartigues

      Affiliations

    • INSERM, U897, Bordeaux cedex, France
    • University Victor Segalen Bordeaux 2, Bordeaux Cedex, France
    • University Hospital of Bordeaux, France

Received 5 April 2007; received in revised form 8 June 2007 and 25 July 2007; accepted 13 August 2007. published online 13 February 2008.

Action editor John Crawford

Abstract 

Reduced semantic fluency performances have been reported in the preclinical phase of Alzheimer's disease (AD). To investigate the cognitive processes underlying this early deficit, this study analyzed the verbal production of predemented subjects for the animals category with the qualitative parameters related to clustering (i.e. the ability to generate words belonging to semantic subcategories of animals) and switching (i.e. the ability to shift from one subcategory to another) proposed by Troyer.

This qualitative analysis was applied to the PAQUID (Personnes Agées QUID) cohort, a 17-year longitudinal population-based study. The performances on the animal verbal fluency task of 51 incident cases of possible and probable AD were analyzed at the onset of dementia, 2 years and 5 years before dementia onset. Each case was matched for age, sex and education to two control subjects leading to a sample of 153 subjects. The mean cluster size and the raw number of switches were compared in the two samples. The results revealed a significantly lower switching index in the future AD subjects than in the elderly controls including 5 years before dementia incidence. A significant decline in this parameter was evidenced all along the prodromal phase until the clinical diagnosis of dementia. In contrast, the mean cluster size could not discriminate the two groups. Therefore the results support the hypothesis that impaired shifting abilities – rather than semantic memory storage degradation – could explain the early decline in semantic fluency performance occurring in the predementia phase of AD.

Keywords: Category verbal fluency, Switching, Clustering, Preclinical, Alzheimer's disease

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PII: S0010-9452(07)00158-X

doi:10.1016/j.cortex.2007.08.019

Cortex
Volume 44, Issue 9 , Pages 1188-1196, October 2008