Literature DB >> 8877621

Automatic semantic facilitation in Alzheimer's disease.

M C Silveri1, D Monteleone, C Burani, P Tabossi.   

Abstract

To explore the nature of semantic deficit in Alzheimer's disease patients (AD patients) we compared two tasks that are known to be very different with respect to the type of attentional demand and conscious effort they require: lexical decision (automatic) in a semantic priming paradigm and semantic relatedness judgements (intentional). In order to minimise post-lexical facilitation we devised a semantic priming experiment that met an automatic condition as much as possible, and we selected patients without severe word recognition deficits. AD patients showed reduced accuracy in the semantic relatedness judgements as compared to controls. Some effect of priming was found, but this was weaker than in normals. AD patients also differed from controls on targets preceded by a nonlinguistic prime (neutral condition) where their reaction times were slower as compared to neutral condition.

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Year:  1996        PMID: 8877621     DOI: 10.1080/01688639608408994

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Clin Exp Neuropsychol        ISSN: 1380-3395            Impact factor:   2.475


  2 in total

1.  Semantic Priming in Mild Cognitive Impairment and Healthy Subjects: Effect of Different Time of Presentation of Word-Pairs.

Authors:  Valeria Guglielmi; Davide Quaranta; Ilaria Mega; Emanuele Maria Costantini; Claudia Carrarini; Alice Innocenti; Camillo Marra
Journal:  J Pers Med       Date:  2020-06-29

2.  Positive Valence Bias in L2 Vocabulary Acquisition: Evidence From Chinese Emotion Idioms.

Authors:  Mengxing Wang; Li Li; Jiushu Xie; Yaoyao Wang; Yao Chen; Ruiming Wang
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2022-03-16
  2 in total

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