“Memory Function” in Psychiatric Patients Over Sixty, the Role of Memory in Tests Discriminating Between “Functional” and “Organic” Groups
- 1 July 1956
- journal article
- Published by Royal College of Psychiatrists in Journal of Mental Science
- Vol. 102 (428) , 589-598
- https://doi.org/10.1192/bjp.102.428.589
Abstract
This paper reports part of a research into the relationship of certain aspects of mental functioning and the psychiatric illnesses of old age. One of the apparent deficits of function to which much importance has been attached is “memory impairment”. This is commonly considered part of various clinical syndromes, especially of the “organic” mental disorder of the senium. The measurement or estimation of memory function is, therefore, thought to be of considerable importance and most clinicians working with elderly patients use some kinds of tests which purport to measure it. There are, however, some points of conflict between clinical usage and the evidence of objective investigations in this area. It has never, for example, been demonstrated in relation to memory assessment that “memory” as such, can usefully be considered as even relatively independent of intelligence in young normal adult subjects (Eysenck and Halstead (1)).Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- “Memory Function” in Psychiatric Patients Over Sixty, Some Methodological and Diagnostic ImplicationsJournal of Mental Science, 1956
- AN INVESTIGATION OF THE NATURE OF COGNITIVE IMPAIRMENT IN CO-OPERATIVE PSYCHIATRIC PATIENTSPsychology and Psychotherapy: Theory, Research and Practice, 1955
- THE MEMORY FUNCTIONAmerican Journal of Psychiatry, 1945