4.5 Article

Fluency test generation and errors in focal frontal and posterior lesions

Journal

NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA
Volume 163, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2021.108085

Keywords

Fluency tests; Errors; Monitoring; Task setting; Energization; Frontal cortex

Funding

  1. Newro Foundation
  2. Brazil Family Program for Neurology
  3. Australian National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) Boosting Dementia Research Leadership Fellowship [APP1135769]
  4. Australian Research Council Discovery Early Career Researcher Award [DE120101119]

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The study finds that fluency tasks are sensitive to correct response numbers and errors (including perseverations and rule-breaks), with patients with frontal damage showing the highest error rates. There is a right frontal effect for perseverative errors when retrieving known items and rule-break errors when creating novel responses. Left lateral effects are specific to phonemic word and meaningless gesture fluency.
The number produced on fluency tasks is widely used to measure voluntary response generation. To further evaluate the relationship between generation, errors, and the area of anatomical damage we administered eight fluency tasks (word, design, gesture, ideational) to a large group of focal frontal (n = 69) and posterior (n = 43) patients and controls (n = 150). Lesions were analysed by a finer-grained frontal localisation method, and traditional subdivisions (anterior/posterior, left/right frontal). Thus, we compared patients with Lateral lesions to patients with Medial lesions. Our results show that all fluency tasks are sensitive to frontal lobe damage for the number of correct responses and, for the first time, we provide evidence that seven fluency tasks show frontal sensitivity in terms of errors (perseverations, rule-breaks). Lateral (not Medial) patients produced the highest error rates, indicative of task-setting or monitoring difficulties. There was a right frontal effect for perseverative errors when retrieving known or stored items and rule-break errors when creating novel responses. Left lateral effects were specific to phonemic word fluency rule-breaks and perseverations for meaningless gesture fluency. In addition, our generation output and error findings support a frontal role in novelty processes. Finally, we confirm our previous generation findings suggesting critical roles of the superior medial region in energization and the left inferior frontal region in selection (Robinson et al., 2012). Overall, these results support the notion that frontal functions comprise a set of highly specialised cognitive processes, supported by distinct frontal regions.

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