13 research outputs found

    Executive function & semantic memory impairments in Alzheimer’s disease — investigating the decline of executive function and semantic memory in Alzheimer’s disease through computer-supported qualitative analysis of semantic verbal fluency and its applications in clinical decision support

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    Alzheimer’s Disease (AD) has a huge impact on an ever-aging society in highly developed industrialized countries such as the EU member states: according to the World Alzheimer’s Association the number one risk factor for AD is age. AD patients suffer from neurodegenerative processes driving cognitive decline which eventually results in the loss of patients’ ability of independent living. Episodic memory impairment is the most prominent cognitive symptom of AD in its clinical stage. In addition, also executive function and semantic memory impairments significantly affect activities of daily living and are discussed as important cognitive symptoms during prodromal as well as acute clinical stages of AD. Most of the research on semantic memory impairments in AD draws evidence from the Semantic Verbal Fluency (SVF) task which evidentially also places high demands on the executive function level. At the same time, the SVF is one of the most-applied routine assessments in clinical neuropsychology especially in the diagnosis of AD. Therefore, the SVF is a prime task to study semantic memory and executive function impairment side-by-side and draw conclusions about their parallel or successive impairments across the clinical trajectory of AD. To effectively investigate semantic memory and executive function processes in the SVF, novel computational measures have been proposed that tap into data-driven semantic as well as temporal metrics scoring an SVF performance on the item-level. With a better and more differentiated understanding of AD-related executive function and semantic memory impairments in the SVF, the SVF can grow from a well-established screening into a more precise diagnostic tool for early AD. As the SVF is one of the most-applied easy-to-use and low-burden neurocognitive assessments in AD, such advancements have a direct impact on clinical practice as well. For the last decades huge efforts have been put on the discovery of disease-modifying compounds responding to specific AD biomarker-related cognitive decline characteristics. However, as most pharmaceutical trials failed, the focus has shifted towards population-wide early screening with cost-effective and scalable cognitive tests representing an effective mid-term strategy. Computer-supported SVF analysis responds to this demand. This thesis pursues a two-fold objective: (1) improve our understanding of the progressive executive function and semantic memory impairments and their interplay in clinical AD as measured by the SVF and (2) harness those insights for applied early and specific AD screening. To achieve both objectives, this thesis comprises work on subjects from different clinical stages of AD (Healthy Aging, amnestic Mild Cognitive Impairment—aMCI, and AD dementia) and in different languages (German & French). All results are based on SVF speech data generated either as a one-time assessment or a repeated within-participant testing. From these SVF speech samples, qualitative markers are extracted with different amount of computational support (ranging from manual processing of speech to fully automated evaluation). The results indicate, that semantic memory is structurally affected from an early clinical—amnestic Mild Cognitive Impairment (aMCI)—stage on and is even more affected in the later acute dementia stage. The semantic memory impairment in AD is particularly worsened through the patients’ inability to compensate by engaging executive functions. Hence, over the course of the disease, hampered executive functioning and therefore the inability to compensate for corrupt semantic memory structures might be the main driver of later-stage AD patients’ notably poor cognitive performance. These insights generated on the SVF alone are only made possible through computer-supported qualitative analysis on an item-per-item level which leads the way towards potential applications in clinical decision support. The more fine-grained qualitative analysis of the SVF is clinically valuable for AD diagnosis and screening but very time-consuming if performed manually. This thesis shows though that automatic analysis pipelines can reliably and validly generate this diagnostic information from the SVF. Automatic transcription of speech plus automatic extraction of the novel qualitative SVF features result in clinical interpretation comparable to manual transcripts and improved diagnostic decision support simulated through machine learning classification experiments. This indicates that the computer-supported SVF could ultimately be used for cost-effective fully automated early clinical AD screening. This thesis advances current AD research in a two-fold manner. First it improves the understanding of the decline of executive function and semantic memory in AD as measured through computational qualitative analysis of the SVF. Secondly, this thesis embeds these theoretical advances into practical clinical decision support concepts that help screen population-wide and cost-effective for early-stage AD.Die Alzheimer-Krankheit (AD) stellt eine enorme Herausforderung für die immer älter werdende Gesellschaft in hochentwickelten Industrieländern wie den EU-Mitgliedsstaaten dar. Nach Angaben der World Alzheimer's Association ist der größte Risikofaktor für AD das Alter. Alzheimer-Patienten leiden unter neurodegenerativen Prozessen, die kognitiven Abbau verursachen und schließlich dazu führen, dass Patienten nicht länger selbstbestimmt leben können. Die Beeinträchtigung des episodischen Gedächtnisses ist das prominenteste kognitive Symptom von AD im klinischen Stadium. Darüber hinaus führen auch Störungen der Exekutivfunktionen sowie der semantischen Gedächtnisleistung zu erheblichen Einschränkungen bei Aktivitäten des täglichen Lebens und werden als wichtige kognitive Symptome sowohl im Prodromal- als auch im akuten klinischen Stadium von AD diskutiert. Der Großteil der Forschung zu semantischen Gedächtnisbeeinträchtigungen bei AD stützt sich auf Ergebnisse aus dem Semantic Verbal Fluency Tests (SVF), der auch die Exekutivfunktionen stark fordert. In der Praxis ist die SVF eines der am häufigsten eingesetzten Routine- Assessments in der klinischen Neuropsychologie, insbesondere bei der Diagnose von AD. Daher ist die SVF eine erstklassige Aufgabe, um die Beeinträchtigung des semantischen Gedächtnisses und der exekutiven Funktionen Seite an Seite zu untersuchen und Rückschlüsse auf ihre parallelen oder sukzessiven Beeinträchtigungen im klinischen Verlauf von AD zu ziehen. Um semantische Gedächtnis- und Exekutivfunktionsprozesse in der SVF effektiv zu untersuchen, wurden jüngst neuartige computergestützte Verfahren vorgeschlagen, die sowohl datengetriebene semantische als auch temporäre Maße nutzen, die eine SVF-Leistung auf Item-Ebene bewerten. Mit einem besseren und differenzierteren Verständnis von ADbedingten Beeinträchtigungen der Exekutivfunktionen und des semantischen Gedächtnisses in der SVF kann sich die SVF von einem gut etablierten Screening zu einem präziseren Diagnoseinstrument für frühe AD entwickeln. Da die SVF eines der am häufigsten angewandten, einfach zu handhabenden und wenig belastenden neurokognitiven Assessments bei AD ist, haben solche Fortschritte auch einen direkten Einfluss auf die klinische Praxis. In den letzten Jahrzehnten wurden enorme Anstrengungen unternommen, um krankheitsmodifizierende Substanzen zu finden, die auf spezifische, mit AD-Biomarkern verbundene Merkmale des kognitiven Abbaus reagieren. Da jedoch die meisten pharmazeutischen Studien in jüngster Vergangenheit fehlgeschlagen sind, wird heute als mittelfristige Strategie bevölkerungsweite Früherkennung mit kostengünstigen und skalierbaren kognitiven Tests gefordert. Die computergestützte SVF-Analyse ist eine Antwort auf diese Forderung. Diese Arbeit verfolgt deshalb zwei Ziele: (1) Verbesserung des Verständnisses der fortschreitenden Beeinträchtigungen der Exekutivfunktionen und des semantischen Gedächtnisses und ihres Zusammenspiels bei klinischer AD, gemessen durch die SVF, und (2) Nutzung dieser Erkenntnisse für angewandte AD-Früherkennung. Um beide Ziele zu erreichen, umfasst diese Thesis Forschung mit Probanden aus verschiedenen klinischen AD Stadien (gesundes Altern, amnestisches Mild Cognitive Impairment-aMCI, und AD-Demenz) und in verschiedenen Sprachen (Deutsch & Französisch). Alle Ergebnisse basieren auf SVF Sprachdaten, erhoben im Querschnittdesign oder als wiederholte Testung in einem Längsschnittdesign. Aus diesen SVF-Sprachproben werden mit unterschiedlicher rechnerischer Unterstützung qualitative Marker extrahiert (von manueller Verarbeitung der Sprache bis hin zu vollautomatischer Auswertung). Die Ergebnisse zeigen, dass das semantische Gedächtnis bereits im frühen aMCI Stadium strukturell beeinträchtigt ist und im späteren akuten Demenzstadium noch stärker betroffen ist. Die strukturelle Beeinträchtigung des semantischen Gedächtnisses bei Alzheimer wird insbesondere dadurch verschlimmert, dass die Patienten nicht in der Lage sind, dies durch den Einsatz exekutiver Funktionen zu kompensieren. Daher könnten im Verlauf der Erkrankung eingeschränkte Exekutivfunktionen und damit die Unfähigkeit, degenerierte semantische Gedächtnisstrukturen zu kompensieren, die Hauptursache für die auffallend schlechten kognitiven Leistungen von AD-Patienten im Akutstadium sein. Diese Erkenntnisse basierend auf der SVF alleine werden erst durch die computergestützte qualitative Analyse auf Item-per-Item-Ebene möglich und weisen den Weg zu möglichen Anwendungen in der klinischen Entscheidungsunterstützung. Die feinkörnigere qualitative Analyse der SVF ist klinisch wertvoll für die AD-Diagnose und das Screening, aber sehr zeitaufwändig, wenn sie manuell durchgeführt wird. Diese Arbeit zeigt jedoch, dass automatische Analysepipelines diese diagnostischen Informationen zuverlässig und valide aus der SVF generieren können. Die automatische Transkription von Sprache plus die automatische Extraktion der neuartigen qualitativen SVF-Merkmale führen zu einer klinischen Interpretation, die mit manuellen Analysen vergleichbar ist. Diese Verarbeitung führt auch zu einer verbesserten diagnostischen Entscheidungsunterstützung, die durch Klassifikationsexperimente mit maschinellem Lernen simuliert wurde. Dies deutet darauf hin, dass die computergestützte SVF letztendlich für ein kostengünstiges vollautomatisches klinisches AD-Frühscreening eingesetzt werden könnte. Diese Arbeit bringt die aktuelle AD-Forschung auf zweifache Weise voran. Erstens verbessert sie unser Verständnis der kognitiven Einschränkungen im Bereich der Exekutivfunktionen und des semantischen Gedächtnisses bei AD, gemessen durch die computergestützte qualitative Analyse der SVF. Zweitens bettet diese Arbeit diese theoretischen Fortschritte in ein praktisches Konzept zur klinischen Entscheidungsunterstützung ein, das zukünftig ein bevölkerungsweites und kosteneffektives Screening für AD im Frühstadium ermöglichen könnte

    Dating Victorians: an experimental approach to stylochronometry

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    A thesis submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy ofthe University of LutonThe writing style of a number of authors writing in English was empirically investigated for the purpose of detecting stylistic patterns in relation to advancing age. The aim was to identify the type of stylistic markers among lexical, syntactical, phonemic, entropic, character-based, and content ones that would be most able to discriminate between early, middle, and late works of the selected authors, and the best classification or prediction algorithm most suited for this task. Two pilot studies were initially conducted. The first one concentrated on Christina Georgina Rossetti and Edgar Allan Poe from whom personal letters and poetry were selected as the genres of study, along with a limited selection of variables. Results suggested that authors and genre vary inconsistently. The second pilot study was based on Shakespeare's plays using a wider selection of variables to assess their discriminating power in relation to a past study. It was observed that the selected variables were of satisfactory predictive power, hence judged suitable for the task. Subsequently, four experiments were conducted using the variables tested in the second pilot study and personal correspondence and poetry from two additional authors, Edna St Vincent Millay and William Butler Yeats. Stepwise multiple linear regression and regression trees were selected to deal with the first two prediction experiments, and ordinal logistic regression and artificial neural networks for two classification experiments. The first experiment revealed inconsistency in accuracy of prediction and total number of variables in the final models affected by differences in authorship and genre. The second experiment revealed inconsistencies for the same factors in terms of accuracy only. The third experiment showed total number of variables in the model and error in the final model to be affected in various degrees by authorship, genre, different variable types and order in which the variables had been calculated. The last experiment had all measurements affected by the four factors. Examination of whether differences in method within each task play an important part revealed significant influences of method, authorship, and genre for the prediction problems, whereas all factors including method and various interactions dominated in the classification problems. Given the current data and methods used, as well as the results obtained, generalizable conclusions for the wider author population have been avoided

    9th International Conference on Business, Technology and Innovation 2020

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    Welcome to IC – UBT 2020 UBT Annual International Conference is the 9th international interdisciplinary peer reviewed conference which publishes works of the scientists as well as practitioners in the area where UBT is active in Education, Research and Development. The UBT aims to implement an integrated strategy to establish itself as an internationally competitive, research-intensive university, committed to the transfer of knowledge and the provision of a world-class education to the most talented students from all background. The main perspective of the conference is to connect the scientists and practitioners from different disciplines in the same place and make them be aware of the recent advancements in different research fields, and provide them with a unique forum to share their experiences. It is also the place to support the new academic staff for doing research and publish their work in international standard level. This conference consists of sub conferences in different fields like: Security Studies Sport, Health and Society Psychology Political Science Pharmaceutical and Natural Sciences Mechatronics, System Engineering and Robotics Medicine and Nursing Modern Music, Digital Production and Management Management, Business and Economics Language and Culture Law Journalism, Media and Communication Information Systems and Security Integrated Design Energy Efficiency Engineering Education and Development Dental Sciences Computer Science and Communication Engineering Civil Engineering, Infrastructure and Environment Architecture and Spatial Planning Agriculture, Food Science and Technology Art and Digital Media This conference is the major scientific event of the UBT. It is organizing annually and always in cooperation with the partner universities from the region and Europe. We have to thank all Authors, partners, sponsors and also the conference organizing team making this event a real international scientific event. Edmond Hajrizi, President of UBTUBT – Higher Education Institutio

    How does rumination impact cognition? A first mechanistic model.

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    Rumination is a process of uncontrolled, narrowly-foused neg- ative thinking that is often self-referential, and that is a hall- mark of depression. Despite its importance, little is known about its cognitive mechanisms. Rumination can be thought of as a specific, constrained form of mind-wandering. Here, we introduce a cognitive model of rumination that we devel- oped on the basis of our existing model of mind-wandering. The rumination model implements the hypothesis that rumina- tion is caused by maladaptive habits of thought. These habits of thought are modelled by adjusting the number of memory chunks and their associative structure, which changes the se- quence of memories that are retrieved during mind-wandering, such that during rumination the same set of negative memo- ries is retrieved repeatedly. The implementation of habits of thought was guided by empirical data from an experience sam- pling study in healthy and depressed participants. On the ba- sis of this empirically-derived memory structure, our model naturally predicts the declines in cognitive task performance that are typically observed in depressed patients. This study demonstrates how we can use cognitive models to better un- derstand the cognitive mechanisms underlying rumination and depression
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