Individuals given a series of words to memorize
normally show better immediate recall for items from the
beginning and end of the list than for midlist items. This
phenomenon, known as the serial position effect, is thought
to reflect the concurrent contributions of secondary and
primary memory, respectively, to recall performance. The
present study compared the serial position effects produced
on Trial 1 of the California Verbal Learning Test (CVLT)
in mildly demented (N = 25; M MMSE = 20.0)
and very mildly demented (N = 25; M MMSE =
25.5) patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD), and age-
and education-matched normal control (NC) participants
(N = 50). In addition, the serial position effects
of the very mildly demented AD patients were compared to
those of patients with a transient, circumscribed amnesia
arising from a prescribed series of electroconvulsive
therapy (ECT) treatments for the relief of depressive illness
(N = 11). While the NC group exhibited the typical
serial position effect, AD patients recalled significantly
fewer words than NC participants overall, and exhibited
a significantly reduced primacy effect (i.e., recall of
the first 2 list items) with a normal recency effect (i.e.,
recall of the last 2 list items). Patients with circumscribed
amnesia due to ECT were as impaired as the very mildly
demented AD patients on most standard CVLT measures of
learning and memory, but exhibited primacy and recency
effects, which were within normal limits. These results
suggest that a reduction in the primacy effect, but not
the recency effect, is an early and ubiquitous feature
of the memory impairment of AD. It is not, however, a necessary
feature of all causes of memory impairment. (JINS,
2000, 6, 290–298.)