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Elevated perseveration errors on a verbal fluency task in frequent nightmare recallers: a replication
Authors:Michelle Carr  Kadia Saint‐Onge  Cloé Blanchette‐Carrière  Tyna Paquette  Tore Nielsen
Institution:1. Dream and Nightmare Laboratory, Center for Advanced Research in Sleep Medicine, CIUSSS‐N?M ‐ H?pital du Sacré‐Coeur de Montréal, Montréal, Québec, Canada;2. Swansea University Sleep Laboratory, Department of Psychology, Swansea University, Swansea, UK;3. Department of Psychology, Université de Montréal, Montréal, Québec, Canada;4. Department of Psychiatry, Université de Montréal, Montréal, Québec, Canada
Abstract:A recent study reported that individuals recalling frequent idiopathic nightmares (NM) produced more perseveration errors on a verbal fluency task than did control participants (CTL), while not differing in overall verbal fluency. Elevated scores on perseveration errors, an index of executive dysfunction, suggest a cognitive inhibitory control deficit in NM participants. The present study sought to replicate these results using a French‐speaking cohort and French language verbal fluency tasks. A phonetic verbal fluency task using three stimulus letters (P, R, V) and a semantic verbal fluency task using two stimulus categories (female and male French first names) were administered to 23 participants with frequent recall of NM (≥2 NM per week, mean age = 24.4 ± 4.0 years), and to 16 CTL participants with few recalled NM (≤ 1 NM per month, mean age = 24.5 ± 3.8 years). All participants were French‐speaking since birth and self‐declared to be in good mental and physical health apart from their NM. As expected, groups did not differ in overall verbal fluency, i.e. total number of correct words produced in response to stimulus letters or categories (P = 0.97). Furthermore, groups exhibited a difference in fluency perseveration errors, with the NM group having higher perseveration than the CTL group (P = 0.03, Cohen's d = 0.745). This replication suggests that frequent NM recallers have executive inhibitory dysfunction during a cognitive association task and supports a neurocognitive model which posits fronto‐limbic impairment as a neural correlate of disturbed dreaming.
Keywords:executive dysfunction  neurocognitive model  nightmares  perseveration  verbal fluency
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