Productive naming and memory in depression and Alzheimer's type dementia☆
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'Normal' semantic-phonemic fluency discrepancy in Alzheimer's disease? A meta-analytic study
2010, CortexCitation Excerpt :The relatively greater impairment of semantic over phonemic fluency in AD has been used to differentiate AD from other dementias, for example, fronto-temporal dementia (Rascovsky et al., 2007) and to differentiate mild AD from healthy elderly subjects (e.g., Gomez and White, 2006). Nevertheless, the opposite pattern of worse phonemic fluency or comparable performance on both measures of fluency has also been, albeit less frequently, reported (Nebes et al., 1984; Ober et al., 1986; Hart et al., 1988; Suhr and Jones, 1998). Heterogeneity on semantic and phonemic fluency tasks has been observed in AD patients.
A computerized technique to assess language use patterns in patients with frontotemporal dementia
2010, Journal of NeurolinguisticsCitation Excerpt :CVLT Free and Delayed Recall tests have been previously shown to elicit memory problems in Alzheimer's patients (Bayley et al., 2000). Lexical retrieval and semantic deficits elicited with the Boston Naming test and WAIS-R Verbal Similarities test have also been shown to be sensitive to the effects of Alzheimer's disease (Hart, Kwentus, Taylor, & Hamer, 1988; Laine, Vuorinen, & Rinne, 1997). Alternatively, these findings are consistent with the severity analyses supporting the notion that perplexity scores will increase as general neuropsychological integrity decreases with disease progression in all forms of FTLD.
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2023, Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology
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This research was supported by NIMH Grant No. 1 RO1 MH39135.