Abstract

Many human lesion und functional brain imaging studies suggest involvement of the cerebellum in cognitive functions. However, negative and inconsistent findings are rarely discussed. It is still an open question as to which areas of cognition the cerebellum contributes, as well as how, and to what extent. Frequently cited earlier findings in one area of cognition have been challenged in more recent studies, that is the cerebellum may not be directly involved in attention. Furthermore, disorders in patients with acquired cerebellar disease are frequently mild and less severe compared to lesions of the corresponding areas of the cerebral cortex. Patients with cerebellar disease often perform within the normal range of neuropsychological test norms. This pattern is illustrated based on general intelligence and verbal working memory, which have been assessed by a large number of authors using comparable tests. Findings, however, appear to be more pronounced in individual cases with acute onset cerebellar disorders and in children, in particular with congenital disease. The review suggests that the inconsistencies in cognitive impairments may offer clues as to the nature of cerebellar cognitive involvement.

Highlights

  • The cerebellum is thought to support cognitive functions of the cerebral cortex, in particular of the frontal and parietal lobes [24]

  • Pressing a response button in the right hand indicated a gap at the top, and pressing the left button indicated a gap at the bottom

  • Cerebellar patients presented with dysmetric saccades

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Summary

Introduction

The cerebellum is thought to support cognitive functions of the cerebral cortex, in particular of the frontal and parietal lobes [24]. Negative and inconsistent findings are frequently not discussed. The latter are the focus of the present review. This is to allow a more balanced discussion, but not to contradict that the cerebellum contributes to cognition. In a number of well-controlled human cerebellar lesion studies, clinical abnormalities appear to be mild and significantly less pronounced compared to lesions of the corresponding cerebral areas ( [21,22, 25,27] for review, [33,50,64,72,88,100,101]). Daum / How consistent are cognitive impairments in patients with cerebellar disorders?

Attention
General intelligence
Verbal working memory
General discussion
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