A meta-analysis on the relationship between subjective cognitive failures as measured by the cognitive failures questionnaire (CFQ) and objective performance on executive function tasks

被引:0
|
作者
Goodhew, Stephanie C. [1 ]
Edwards, Mark [1 ]
机构
[1] Australian Natl Univ, Sch Med & Psychol, Canberra, Australia
关键词
Cognitive failures; Cognitive Failures Questionnaire; Executive function; Working memory; SART; Inhibition; Shifting; Switching; WORKING-MEMORY CAPACITY; TRAUMATIC BRAIN-INJURY; INDIVIDUAL-DIFFERENCES; SUSTAINED ATTENTION; GOAL MANAGEMENT; ECOLOGICAL VALIDITY; RESPONSE-INHIBITION; PHYSICAL-ACTIVITY; EVERYDAY MEMORY; BREAST-CANCER;
D O I
10.3758/s13423-024-02573-6
中图分类号
B841 [心理学研究方法];
学科分类号
040201 ;
摘要
The Cognitive Failures Questionnaire (CFQ) has been widely used as a measure of subjective cognitive function in everyday life for decades. However, the evidence on how it relates to objective performance on executive function tasks is mixed. One possible reason for these mixed results is that the CFQ has selective relationships with some aspects of executive function and not others. Here, therefore, we classified tasks according to an influential framework of executive functions-switching, updating, inhibition, and we also considered the Sustained Attention to Response Task (SART) as a category because it was custom designed to gauge cognitive failures. We synthesized a large body of available evidence and performed four Bayesian meta-analyses on the relationship between CFQ scores and objective performance on executive function tasks in these four categories. Results suggested that CFQ scores were associated with objective performance on SART (18 effect sizes, mu = -.19, BF10 = 18.03, i.e., 18.03 times more evidence of a relationship versus no relationship), updating working memory (49 effect sizes, mu = -.06, BF10 = 17.80), and inhibition tasks (41 effect sizes, mu = -.07, BF10 = 15.40), whereas there was not definitive evidence regarding switching (34 effect sizes, mu = -.06, BF10 = .50, i.e., two times greater evidence for no relationship). This suggests that subjective cognitive function can predict objective performance on at least some executive function tasks. We discuss methodological and theoretical factors that constrain the maximum observable correlation and consider the relative insights that subjective measures versus task performance provide.
引用
收藏
页数:19
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] COGNITIVE DECLINE MODERATES THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN OBJECTIVE AND SUBJECTIVE INDICATORS OF STRESS AND EVERYDAY MEMORY FAILURES
    Hahn, E. A.
    Almeida, D.
    Seeman, T.
    Lachman, M.
    [J]. GERONTOLOGIST, 2013, 53 : 586 - 587
  • [2] The relationship between the subjective experience of real-world cognitive failures and objective target-detection performance in visual search
    Thomson, Katherine J.
    Goodhew, Stephanie C.
    [J]. COGNITION, 2021, 217
  • [3] Relationship between subjective cognitive function and cognitive performance in patients with PSS
    Segal, Barbara M.
    Holker, Erin
    Carpenter, Adam
    Sloan, Jeff
    Liu, Heshan
    [J]. ARTHRITIS AND RHEUMATISM, 2008, 58 (09): : S789 - S789
  • [4] Relationship between subjective and objective cognitive performance in multiple sclerosis
    Rosti-Otajarvi, E.
    Ruutiainen, J.
    Huhtala, H.
    Hamalainen, P.
    [J]. ACTA NEUROLOGICA SCANDINAVICA, 2014, 130 (05): : 319 - 327
  • [5] Relationship between subjective and objective cognitive function in the early and late prodrome
    Schultze-Lutter, Frauke
    Ruhrmann, Stephan
    Picker, Heinz
    von Reventlow, Heinrich Graf
    Daumann, Bianca
    Brockhaus-Dumke, Anke
    Klosterkoetter, Joachim
    Pukrop, Ralf
    [J]. BRITISH JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY, 2007, 191 : S43 - S51
  • [6] The relationship between hearing impairment and cognitive function: a meta-analysis in adults
    Taljaard, D. S.
    Olaithe, M.
    Brennan-Jones, C. G.
    Eikelboom, R. H.
    Bucks, R. S.
    [J]. CLINICAL OTOLARYNGOLOGY, 2016, 41 (06) : 718 - 729
  • [7] Heritability of cognitive abilities as measured by mental chronometric tasks: A meta-analysis
    Beaujean, AA
    [J]. INTELLIGENCE, 2005, 33 (02) : 187 - 201
  • [8] Cognitive and Executive Function in Congenital Heart Disease: A Meta-analysis
    Feldmann, Maria
    Bataillard, Celina
    Ehrler, Melanie
    Ullrich, Cinzia
    Knirsch, Walter
    Gosteli-Peter, Martina A.
    Held, Ulrike
    Latal, Beatrice
    [J]. PEDIATRICS, 2021, 148 (04)
  • [9] The relationship between depression and cognitive performance in multiple sclerosis: a meta-analysis
    Altieri, Manuela
    Cerciello, Francesco
    Gallo, Antonio
    Santangelo, Gabriella
    [J]. CLINICAL NEUROPSYCHOLOGIST, 2024, 38 (01) : 21 - 41
  • [10] DOES COGNITIVE RESERVE IMPACT THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN SLEEP DISTURBANCE AND COGNITIVE PERFORMANCE: A META-ANALYSIS
    Gonella, Y.
    Pushpanathan, M.
    McKenzie, C.
    Weinborn, M.
    Bucks, R.
    [J]. SLEEP MEDICINE, 2019, 64 : S51 - S51