851 research outputs found

    Preserved Extra-Foveal Processing of Object Semantics in Alzheimer’s Disease

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    Alzheimer’s disease (AD) patients underperform on a range of tasks requiring semantic processing, but it is unclear whether this impairment is due to a generalised loss of semantic knowledge or to issues in accessing and selecting such information from memory. The objective of this eye-tracking visual search study was to determine whether semantic expectancy mechanisms known to support object recognition in healthy adults are preserved in AD patients. Furthermore, as AD patients are often reported to be impaired in accessing information in extra-foveal vision, we investigated whether that was also the case in our study. Twenty AD patients and 20 age-matched controls searched for a target object among an array of distractors presented extra-foveally. The distractors were either semantically related or unrelated to the target (e.g., a car in an array with other vehicles or kitchen items). Results showed that semantically related objects were detected with more difficulty than semantically unrelated objects by both groups, but more markedly by the AD group. Participants looked earlier and for longer at the critical objects when these were semantically unrelated to the distractors. Our findings show that AD patients can process the semantics of objects and access it in extra-foveal vision. This suggests that their impairments in semantic processing may reflect difficulties in accessing semantic information rather than a generalised loss of semantic memory

    Semantic variant primary progressive aphasia: Practical recommendations for treatment from 20 years of behavioural research

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    People with semantic variant primary progressive aphasia (svPPA) present with a char-acteristic progressive breakdown of semantic knowledge. There are currently no pharmacological interventions to cure or slow svPPA, but promising behavioural approaches are increasingly reported. This article offers an overview of the last two decades of research into interventions to support language in people with svPPA including recommendations for clinical practice and future research based on the best available evidence. We offer a lay summary in English, Spanish and French for education and dissemination purposes. This paper discusses the implications of right-versus left-predominant atrophy in svPPA, which naming therapies offer the best outcomes and how to capitalise on preserved long-term memory systems. Current knowledge regarding the maintenance and generalisation of language therapy gains is described in detail along with the development of compensatory approaches and educational and support group programmes. It is concluded that there is evidence to support an integrative framework of treatment and care as best practice for svPPA. Such an approach should combine rehabilitation interventions addressing the language impairment, compensatory approaches to support activities of daily living and provision of education and support within the context of dementia

    The Role of Lexical-Semantic Neighborhood in Object Naming: Implications for Models of Lexical Access

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    The role of lexical-semantic neighborhood is relevant to models of lexical access. Recently it has been claimed that the size of the cohort of activated competitors affects ease of lexical selection in word production as well as the effect of semantically related distractors in picture–word interference tasks. Three experiments are reported in which subjects had to name pictures from large and small semantic categories (cf. “lion,” “hammer” versus “funnel,” “cage”). In Experiment 1, naming-impaired subjects exhibited semantic errors for targets from large categories. No semantic but many omission errors occurred for targets from small categories suggesting that few competitors were available for these “low competition targets.” In contrast in two experiments with unimpaired subjects, targets were named equally fast. These experiments were sensitive enough to yield a highly significant repetition effect in Experiment 2. Contrary to the explicit predictions of a recent proposal, semantically related distractors caused interference for both groups of words in Experiment 3. The results suggest no role of neighborhood size in the naming of unimpaired individuals. Implications for models of lexical selection are discussed

    Better conversations: a language and communication intervention for aphasia in posterior cortical atrophy

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    Posterior cortical atrophy (PCA) describes a neurodegenerative syndrome characterized by progressive difficulties in cortical visual and other posterior cortical functions consistent with parieto-occipital and occipito-temporal involvement. It is increasingly recognized that many patients develop difficulties with other aspects of daily living, in particular, with language and communication. We present a case emphasizing how language difficulties may emerge in PCA. Difficulties are interpreted as arising from interacting effects of linguistic deficits and impaired detection of nonverbal (particularly, visual) turns that normally facilitate, schedule, and disambiguate the exchange of verbal messages between speakers. We propose that relatively simple speech and language therapy interventions may hold promise in addressing language and communication difficulties as secondary features of PCA by targeting the behaviors of both the person with PCA and their communication partners

    The Linguistic and Cultural Aspects of Neuropsychological Assessment in People with Dementia

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    Objectives: Given the public health crisis that Alzheimer's disease (AD) has become (Naylor et al., 2012),neuropsychological assessment tools that provide timely and accurate identification of cognitive decline in older adults have gained increasing focus in the scientific literature. Accurate evaluation of cognitive function and early identification of cognitive changes are paramount to understanding the disease course of AD and improving effective treatments and patients' quality of life. To this end, language offers a cognitive neuropsychological approach to identifying cognitive decline in the early stages of AD. Moreover, it represents a multi-dimensional variable that may influence the neuropsychological test performance of older adults due to its potential contribution to cognitive reserve. Therefore, the present thesis aims at combining two aspects of language to explore its potential in the early detection of AD and its association with neuropsychological test performance in older adults and cross-cultural neuropsychology. Study 1 assessed the currently available studies to explore whether discourse processing, particularly macro-structural discourse comprehension, offers a novel approach to neuropsychological testing in distinguishing normal cognitive aging from AD pathology-related decline. Study 2 evaluated the results of the studies that examined the impact of bilingualism on neuropsychological test performance in monolingual and bilingual older adults to inform the neuropsychological evaluation of these groups in clinical practice. Study 3 investigated the influence of bilingualism and its associated factors, namely, cultural background and acculturation, on cognitive screening tests in three clinically diagnosed AD patient groups to identify a cross-culturally/linguistically appropriate measure of cognition. Method: Data of Study 1 and Study 2 were based on the original research studies published in English investigating discourse comprehension and bilingualism in healthy older adults, individuals with mild cognitive impairment (MCI), and AD. A literature search focusing on these topics with participant groups aged 60 years and over was conducted in PubMed, Web of Science, and PsycINFO databases. Study 1 included eight articles consisting of studies only with cross sectional designs. Study 2 was comprised of twenty-seven articles, of which sixteen articles had cross-sectional designs. On the other hand, Study 3 was original research based on a cross sectional design targeting culturally/linguistically diverse patients diagnosed with AD. Specifically, the study sample consisted of Turkish immigrant (n=21) and monolingual, non-immigrant German (n=20) and Turkish (n=24) patients with AD. All participants were administered the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE), Rowland Universal Dementia Assessment Scale (RUDAS), a dementia severity rating scale, and a self-report measure of depression. Additionally, self-report measures of bilingualism and acculturation were conducted with Turkish-immigrant participants with AD. Results: Study 1 revealed that people with AD and MCI have significant deficits in discourse comprehension, which are not observed in cognitively normal older adults of any age. On five of six discourse comprehension measures, groups with AD were significantly worse than healthy older adults, with one measure yielding mixed findings. Furthermore, compared to the cognitively healthy groups, individuals with MCI showed significant performance deficits in discourse comprehension measures similar to those with AD. Study 2 indicated better performance for bilingual older adults on executive function tests when compared to their monolingual counterparts. On the other hand, bilinguals were found to perform poorer than monolinguals on tests assessing the language domain. However, these findings did not remain robust when the impact of bilingualism on test performance was investigated longitudinally. Lastly, Study 3 provided further evidence on the linguistic and educational bias of the MMSE when employed in culturally and linguistically diverse individuals with AD. Bilingualism was linked to better performance on the MMSE in the Turkish immigrant group. German patients with AD obtained higher scores on this test than the other two groups. Furthermore, RUDAS was shown to be a better alternative for assessing global cognition in German and Turkish individuals with AD. Conclusion: The macro-structural discourse comprehension assessment paradigm has shown promising results in identifying the preclinical stages of AD. Further research on this paradigm may help develop a diagnostic tool with a clinical value that can be utilized for differential diagnosis, predicting conversion from MCI to dementia in research and clinical settings. On the other hand, another aspect of linguistic skills, namely, the evaluation of research on the link between bilingualism and neuropsychological test performance, did not provide definitive answers to the question of bilingual advantages and disadvantages addressed in the second study due to methodological challenges in the field. However, it identified a comprehensive and critical list of clinically and empirically relevant bilingualism-associated variables which may guide future research and neuropsychological practice. In light of the Study 2 findings, Study 3 filled an important gap in the literature by exploring cultural, demographic, and immigration related factors that may influence neuropsychological testing experiences in Germany. The study findings may help the field of cross-cultural neuropsychology serve culturally and linguistically diverse populations more efficiently. Overall, the present thesis contributed to the literature by highlighting the importance and potential of linguistic abilities in the clinical diagnosis and neuropsychological evaluation of individuals with dementia

    Diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease based on virtual environments

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