Reliance on external cues during serial sequential movement in major depression

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Abstract

Maintenance of motor set in patients with unipolar major depression was examined. Twelve melancholic and 12 non-melancholic depressed patients and 24 age matched controls performed a serial choice reaction time task while external cues aiding maintenance of a motor set were systematically removed. Melancholic patients were significantly slower than controls with no reduction in external cues and with a moderate reduction in external cues. At a high level of reduction in external cues, seven of 12 melancholic patients (but only three of 12 non-melancholic patients and controls) were unable to complete the task; suggesting a greater reliance on external cues, perhaps implicating a failure of motor planning ability in melancholic patients. This, in turn, may point to a prefrontal (premotor) deficit in melancholic depression, with possible commonalities with Parkinson's disease.

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Rogers, M. A., Bradshaw, J. L., Phillips, J. G., & Chiu, E. (2000). Reliance on external cues during serial sequential movement in major depression. Journal of Neurology Neurosurgery and Psychiatry, 69(2), 237–239. https://doi.org/10.1136/jnnp.69.2.237

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