Inefficient response inhibition in individuals with mild cognitive impairment.

Abstract

Individuals diagnosed with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) show primary deficits in memory and are at increased risk for developing Alzheimer's disease (AD). In light of recent evidence that executive cognitive deficits are common in AD and may be detectable in individuals diagnosed with MCI, we extend these findings to the investigation of response inhibition, an essential aspect of executive cognitive control. Twenty MCI patients and 20 healthy controls (HC) completed an arrow version of the flanker task [Eriksen, B. A., & Eriksen, C. W. (1974). Effects of noise letters upon the identification of target letters in a non-search task. Perception & Psychophysics, 16, 143-149] in which participants responded to a target arrow surrounded by distractors (i.e., flankers) that signaled a same (congruent) or a conflicting (incongruent) response. Reaction time (RT) increased in both groups when flankers signaled an incongruent response, but more so among MCI patients. MCI patients taking a cholinesterase inhibitor showed smaller flanker interference effects than those not taking this medication. Analysis of the flanker effect as a function of the entire RT distribution indicated that MCI patients show increasing interference at the slowest segments of the distribution, a finding that implicates deficient inhibition of the incongruent response [Ridderinkhof, K. R. (2002). Activation and suppression in conflict tasks: Empirical clarification through distributional analyses. In W. Prinz & B. Hommel (Eds.), Common mechanisms in perception and action. Attention & performance, Vol. XIX (pp. 494-519). Oxford: Oxford University Press]. These results suggest that deficits in response inhibition are detectable in MCI patients and merit further investigation as to whether these changes aid prediction of which MCI patients convert to AD.