RESUMO
We studied the integrity of working memory operations in 38 HIV-seropositive and 20 seronegative drug users, using a modified version of the Tower of London task. This new task, the Tower of London-Working Memory version (TOL-WM), includes a delayed-response component in addition to the planning required for successful performance of the standard TOL. Symptomatic HIV-seropositive participants solved significantly fewer TOL-WM problems compared to matched seronegative controls. However, seropositive and seronegative subjects showed similar overall levels of planning efficiency, suggesting that the TOL-WM deficit may be associated primarily with failure to encode or maintain an adequate online memory representation. The results of this study confirm our previous report of a possible working memory deficit in HIV-1 infection and suggest that measures of working memory have particular utility in the evaluation of HIV-related cognitive deficits.
Assuntos
Infecções por HIV/psicologia , HIV-1 , Transtornos da Memória/psicologia , Adulto , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Testes NeuropsicológicosRESUMO
This study investigates the relation of ego development, age, gender, and diagnosis to suicidality among 219 adolescent psychiatric inpatients. Using the Diagnostic Interview Schedule for Children, adolescents were classified as suicide attempters or as nonsuicidal and were categorized into three diagnostic groups: affective disorder, conduct disorder, or mixed conduct-affective disorder. Ego development measurement was used to assess developmental maturity. Chi-square analyses demonstrated a relation between suicide attempts and developmental complexity. Attempters were more likely to be diagnosed with affective or mixed conduct-affective disorders and to be girls. Suicidality was not associated with age in this sample. Log-linear analyses demonstrated the interplay of known suicide risk factors with the important new dimension of developmental level.