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Clustering and switching strategies in verbal fluency tasks: Comparison between schizophrenics and healthy adults

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 November 1998

PHILIPPE H. ROBERT
Affiliation:
From the Memory Center, Department of Psychiatry, University of Nice Sophia, Antipolis, France
VALÉRIE LAFONT
Affiliation:
From the Memory Center, Department of Psychiatry, University of Nice Sophia, Antipolis, France
ISABELLE MEDECIN
Affiliation:
From the Memory Center, Department of Psychiatry, University of Nice Sophia, Antipolis, France
LAURENCE BERTHET
Affiliation:
From the Memory Center, Department of Psychiatry, University of Nice Sophia, Antipolis, France
SANDRINE THAUBY
Affiliation:
From the Memory Center, Department of Psychiatry, University of Nice Sophia, Antipolis, France
CLAUDE BAUDU
Affiliation:
From the Memory Center, Department of Psychiatry, University of Nice Sophia, Antipolis, France
GUY DARCOURT
Affiliation:
From the Memory Center, Department of Psychiatry, University of Nice Sophia, Antipolis, France

Abstract

Verbal fluency tasks are frequently used in clinical neuropsychology. Clustering (the production of words within semantic subcategories) and switching (the ability to shift between clusters) have been described as 2 components underlying fluency performance. We compared the use of clustering and switching in schizophrenic patients and healthy subjects. Seventy-eight schizophrenic subjects (DSM–IV criteria) and 64 control participants matched for age and educational level were recruited. Negative, disorganized, and productive clinical dimensions were evaluated using the SANS and SAPS scales. The number of words generated per semantic–phonemic cluster and the number of switches were evaluated during 2 verbal fluency tasks (phonemic and semantic). In the healthy controls switching and clustering were closely related to the total number of words generated in the verbal fluency tests. The role of the 2 components was partly dependent on the specific task. Switching was prevalent in formal fluency, while both switching and clustering contributed to semantic fluency. In comparison to the healthy controls, the overall group of schizophrenic patients showed a significant impairment of switching in the formal fluency task and of both switching and clustering in the semantic fluency task, and both the negative and disorganized dimensions correlated with verbal fluency performance, the number of switches during the phonemic fluency task, and the clustering during semantic fluency task. (JINS, 1998, 4, 539–546.)

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 1998 The International Neuropsychological Society

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