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Guangzhou University of Chinese Medicine, Shenzhen Traditional Chinese Medicine Hospital

1 ARTICLES PUBLISHED IN JoVE

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Neuroscience

Dual-Task Stroop Paradigm for Detecting Cognitive Deficits in High-Functioning Stroke Patients
Songjun Lin 1,2, Qiang Lin 3,4,5, Biyi Zhao 3,4,6, Yongchun Jiang 3,4, Wanqi Zhuang 3,4, Delong Chen 3,4, Yajie Zhang 3,4, Aijia Chen 3,4, Qianrong Zhang 7, Yuxin Zheng 3,4, Jianjun Wang 1, Fangqiu Xu 8, Xi Qin 3,4,9, Yefeng Cai 10
1Department of Neurology and Psychology, the Fourth Clinical Medical College, Guangzhou University of Chinese Medicine, Shenzhen Traditional Chinese Medicine Hospital, 2Guangzhou University of Chinese Medicine, 3Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, The Fifth Affiliated Hospital of Guangzhou Medical University, 4Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Guangzhou Medical University, 5Key Laboratory of Biological Targeting Diagnosis, Therapy and Rehabilitation of Guangdong Higher Education Institutes, The Fifth Affiliated Hospital of Guangzhou Medical University, 6School of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Jinan University, 7Health College of Guangdong Pharmaceutical University, 8Department of Clinical Medicine, Guangzhou Medical University, 9Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Panzhihua Central Hospital, 10Department of Neurology and Psychology, the Second Affiliated Hospital of Guangzhou University of Chinese Medicine

Clinical assessment scales are notsensitive enough to cognitive dysfunction in high-functioning stroke patients. The dual-task paradigm presents advantages and potential in the assessment and cognitive training of cognitive dysfunction. The study here proposes a dual-task Stroop paradigm to identify cognitive dysfunction in high-functioning stroke patients.

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