Executive Functions are Independently Associated with Cognitive Dispersion in HIV Disease.

Romeo Penheiro, Troy A Webber, Andrew M Kiselica, Steven Paul Woods
Author Information
  1. Romeo Penheiro: Department of Psychology, University of Houston, Houston, TX 77204, USA. ORCID
  2. Troy A Webber: Department of Psychology, University of Houston, Houston, TX 77204, USA.
  3. Andrew M Kiselica: Department of Health Psychology, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO 65203, USA.
  4. Steven Paul Woods: Department of Psychology, University of Houston, Houston, TX 77204, USA. ORCID

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: People with HIV (PWH) can demonstrate elevated cognitive intraindividual variability (IIV-dispersion) that is associated with everyday functioning problems. Higher IIV-dispersion is theorized to reflect lapses in executive aspects of cognitive control, but few studies have directly evaluated this possibility.
METHOD: 72 PWH completed the Cogstate and clinical measures of executive functions, psychomotor speed, and episodic memory. IIV-dispersion was calculated with the coefficient of variation (CoV) from six age-adjusted Cogstate subtest scores.
RESULTS: Multiple regression showed that the three domain-level cognitive predictors explained 8% of the variance in Cogstate CoV (p = .03). Within this model, poorer executive functions were moderately associated with higher Cogstate CoV (p = .01), but the psychomotor and episodic memory domains were not (ps > .05).
CONCLUSIONS: Findings align with cognitive theory in demonstrating IIV-dispersion is uniquely associated with independent measures of executive functions among PWH. Future experimental and mechanistic studies are needed to determine the precise executive aspects of IIV-dispersion.

Keywords

Grants

  1. U54 AG063546/NIA NIH HHS
  2. R01-MH073419/NIH HHS
  3. U54AG063546/National Institute on Aging (NIA) of the National Institutes of Health
  4. /NIA Imbedded Pragmatic Alzheimer's and ADRelated Dementias Clinical Trials Collaboratory

Word Cloud

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