Purpose: Action fluency (AF), the rapid generation of verbs, has been proposed as a sensitive marker of cognitive impairment in Parkinson's disease (PD). However, it is unclear whether AF reflects domain-general executive–generative abilities or a disease-specific motor semantic deficit. This study examined the cognitive predictors of AF in individuals with PD without dementia (PD-ND). Method: Thirty-one older adults (14 PD-ND, 17 healthy controls) matched on age, sex, and education completed AF, letter fluency, semantic fluency, design fluency, processing speed, and global cognition tasks. AF responses were scored for unique verbs. A multiple regression model examined whether PD status, other fluency scores, processing speed, and global cognition predicted AF performance while controlling for demographic covariates. Results: Letter, semantic, and design fluency each independently explained variance in AF, whereas processing speed, global cognition, age, education, and PD status were not significant predictors. Thus, group differences between PD-ND and controls were not observed once domain-general fluency abilities were considered. Conclusions: AF performance in PD-ND reflects domain-general executive–generative mechanisms rather than an isolated verb semantic deficit. Clinically, AF should be interpreted as an integrative measure of executive control. Incorporating a multidimensional fluency battery may improve diagnostic sensitivity and inform targeted interventions for cognitive-communication impairments in PD.
Paek et al. (Tue,) studied this question.