Olfactory identification deficits in Down's syndrome and idiopathic mental retardation

P Hemdal, J Corwin, H Oster - Neuropsychologia, 1993 - Elsevier
P Hemdal, J Corwin, H Oster
Neuropsychologia, 1993Elsevier
We investigated olfactory identification in children and adults with Down's syndrome (DS)
and idiopathic mental retardation (IMR) and in age-matched normal controls (NC).
Identification was assessed with a four alternative-forced-choice task modified from the
University of Pennsylvania Smell Identification Test (M-UPSIT) and a yes/no task yielding
measures of discrimination and response bias for the same stimulus material. Control tactile
identification tasks were also administered. Results were that odor identification …
Abstract
We investigated olfactory identification in children and adults with Down's syndrome (DS) and idiopathic mental retardation (IMR) and in age-matched normal controls (NC). Identification was assessed with a four alternative-forced-choice task modified from the University of Pennsylvania Smell Identification Test (M-UPSIT) and a yes/no task yielding measures of discrimination and response bias for the same stimulus material. Control tactile identification tasks were also administered. Results were that odor identification performance on both tasks was specifically impaired in DS compared to IMR and NC. Accuracy of identification on the M-UPSIT correlated inversely with age in DS only. When uncertain, DS and IMR subjects guessed “yes” more often than “no” on the Yes/No task (liberal decision bias) and guessed the last response alternative on the M-UPSIT (recent position bias), whereas the normal subjects had neutral decision bias on the Yes/No task and matched the objective position presentation probabilities on the M-UPSIT. Decision bias correlated with accuracy of identification in both tasks for the DS subjects only.
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