OBJECTIVE: : This study addressed the issue of whether person naming deficits in mild cognitive impairment (MCI) occurred with deficits in person semantic knowledge and whether person knowledge was more impaired than general semantics. BACKGROUND: : Recent definitions of MCI are beginning to encompass cognitive impairments outside the domain of episodic memory. Increasing evidence suggests that semantic memory may also be compromised in this patient group, including tasks of person naming and identification. METHODS: : Thirteen MCI patients and 14 control subjects matched for age and education performed parallel semantic batteries designed to probe person and general semantic knowledge. RESULTS: : On the person battery, the MCI patients demonstrated impairment relative to controls, on tasks of category fluency, naming, identification, verbal and nonverbal associative and sorting tasks, as well as matching names to faces. By contrast, on the general semantic battery impairments, they were impaired only on category fluency and the nonverbal sorting and associative tasks. A composite measure of person knowledge tasks was also sensitive to disease severity as measured by Mini-Mental State Examination. CONCLUSIONS: : These results support the existence of deficits in MCI across various domains of person knowledge, and the suggestion that deterioration of unique semantic exemplars may be sensitive to incipient Alzheimer disease.
OBJECTIVE: : This study addressed the issue of whether person naming deficits in mild cognitive impairment (MCI) occurred with deficits in person semantic knowledge and whether person knowledge was more impaired than general semantics. BACKGROUND: : Recent definitions of MCI are beginning to encompass cognitive impairments outside the domain of episodic memory. Increasing evidence suggests that semantic memory may also be compromised in this patient group, including tasks of person naming and identification. METHODS: : Thirteen MCI patients and 14 control subjects matched for age and education performed parallel semantic batteries designed to probe person and general semantic knowledge. RESULTS: : On the person battery, the MCI patients demonstrated impairment relative to controls, on tasks of category fluency, naming, identification, verbal and nonverbal associative and sorting tasks, as well as matching names to faces. By contrast, on the general semantic battery impairments, they were impaired only on category fluency and the nonverbal sorting and associative tasks. A composite measure of person knowledge tasks was also sensitive to disease severity as measured by Mini-Mental State Examination. CONCLUSIONS: : These results support the existence of deficits in MCI across various domains of person knowledge, and the suggestion that deterioration of unique semantic exemplars may be sensitive to incipient Alzheimer disease.
Authors: Maria Stefania De Simone; Massimo De Tollis; Lucia Fadda; Roberta Perri; Carlo Caltagirone; Giovanni Augusto Carlesimo Journal: J Neurol Date: 2019-09-30 Impact factor: 4.849
Authors: Michael Seidenberg; Christina D Kay; John L Woodard; Kristy A Nielson; J Carson Smith; Cassandra Kandah; Leslie M Guidotti Breting; Julia Novitski; Melissa Lancaster; Monica Matthews; Nathan Hantke; Alissa Butts; Stephen M Rao Journal: Neuropsychology Date: 2013-05 Impact factor: 3.295
Authors: María Campos-Magdaleno; David Leiva; Arturo X Pereiro; Cristina Lojo-Seoane; Sabela C Mallo; Ana Nieto-Vieites; Onésimo Juncos-Rabadán; David Facal Journal: Front Psychol Date: 2020-03-13