TABLE 1.
Variable | Statistic | Left-sided cerebellar lesion (N = 13) | Right-sided cerebellar lesion (N = 15) | Controls (N = 31) | χ2 (df) | p |
Age | Mean (SD) | 50.089 (18.464) | 53.200 (16.917) | 57.670 (13.262) | 1.466 (2) | 0.481 |
Time since lesion (days) | Mean (SD) | 122.769 (175.061) | 128.800 (92.139) | - | 2.127 (1) | 0.145 |
Sex | N (%) | 3.762 (2) | 0.152 | |||
Women | 8 (61.538) | 9 (60.000) | 11 (35.484) | |||
Men | 5 (38.462) | 6 (40.000) | 20 (64.516) | |||
Education | N (%) | 4.127 (2) | 0.660 | |||
Primary school | 1 (7.692) | 1 (6.667) | 2 (6.452) | |||
Secondary school | 3 (23.077) | 5 (33.333) | 10 (32.258) | |||
High school | 6 (46.154) | 2 (13.333) | 9 (29.032) | |||
University | 3 (23.077) | 7 (46.667) | 10 (32.258) |
Three participants with vermis damage were excluded from the analyses; to check whether there are significant differences between groups on “age” and “time since lesion” variables, Kruskal–Wallis and Mann–Whitney tests were used; to check whether there is significant association between “sex,” “education,” and “group” variables, chi-squared tests were utilized.