Category Deficits and Paradoxical Dissociations in Alzheimer's Disease and Herpes Simplex Encephalitis

Most studies examining category specificity are single-case studies of patients with living or nonliving deficits. Nevertheless, no explicit or agreed criteria exist for establishing category-specific deficits in single cases regarding the type of analyses, whether to compare with healthy controls, the number of tasks, or the type of tasks. We examined two groups of patients with neurological pathology frequently accompanied by impaired semantic memory (19 patients with Alzheimer's disease and 15 with Herpes Simplex Encephalitis). Category knowledge was examined using three tasks (picture naming, naming-to-description, and feature verification). Both patient groups were compared with age-and education-matched healthy controls. The profile in each patient was examined for consistency across tasks and across different analyses; however, both proved to be inconsistent. One striking finding was the presence of paradoxical dissociations (i.e., patients who were impaired for living things on one task and nonliving things on another task). The findings have significant implications for how we determine category effects and, more generally, for the methods used to document double dissociations across individual cases in this literature.

[1]  R. Mccarthy,et al.  Naming without knowing and appearance without associations: evidence for constructive processes in semantic memory? , 1995, Memory.

[2]  A. Caramazza,et al.  WHAT ARE THE FACTS OF SEMANTIC CATEGORY-SPECIFIC DEFICITS? A CRITICAL REVIEW OF THE CLINICAL EVIDENCE , 2003, Cognitive neuropsychology.

[3]  Guido Gainotti,et al.  What the Locus of Brain Lesion Tells us About the Nature of the Cognitive Defect Underlying Category-Specific Disorders: A Review , 2000, Cortex.

[4]  T. Gale,et al.  Inflated and contradictory category naming deficits in Alzheimer’s disease? , 2003, Brain and Cognition.

[5]  Matthew A. Lambon Ralph,et al.  Are living and non-living category-specific deficits causally linked to impaired perceptual or associative knowledge? evidence from a category-specific double dissociation , 1998 .

[6]  P. McKenna,et al.  Domain‐specific deficits in schizophrenia , 2006, Cognitive neuropsychiatry.

[7]  G. Gainotti,et al.  Dissociation between knowledge of living and nonliving things in dementia of the Alzheimer type , 1991, Neurology.

[8]  Michael Hull,et al.  Patterns of Regional Brain Hypometabolism Associated with Knowledge of Semantic Features and Categories in Alzheimer's Disease , 2006, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.

[9]  S. Folstein,et al.  "Mini-mental state". A practical method for grading the cognitive state of patients for the clinician. , 1975, Journal of psychiatric research.

[10]  Mark S. Seidenberg,et al.  Double Dissociation of Semantic Categories in Alzheimer's Disease , 1997, Brain and Language.

[11]  Tim M. Gale,et al.  When is Category Specific in Alzheimer's Disease? , 2005, Cortex.

[12]  M. D. O'Brien,et al.  Cerebral blood flow in dementia , 1986, Neurology.

[13]  Tim M. Gale,et al.  When is category specific in dementia of Alzheimer's type ? , 2007 .

[14]  P Garrard,et al.  Category specific semantic loss in dementia of Alzheimer's type. Functional-anatomical correlations from cross-sectional analyses. , 1998, Brain : a journal of neurology.

[15]  Keith R. Laws,et al.  “Illusions of Normality”: a Methodological Critique of Category-Specific Naming , 2005, Cortex.

[16]  K. Laws,et al.  WHY LEOPARDS NEVER CHANGE THEIR SPOTS: A REPLY TO MOSS, TYLER, AND JENNINGS. , 1998, Cognitive neuropsychology.

[17]  Tim M. Gale,et al.  The influence of surface and edge-based visual similarity on object recognition , 2003, Brain and Cognition.

[18]  T. Shallice,et al.  Category specific semantic impairments , 1984 .

[19]  N Birbaumer,et al.  Category-specific semantic impairment in Alzheimer's disease and temporal lobe dysfunction: a comparative study. , 1994, Journal of clinical and experimental neuropsychology.

[20]  Murray Grossman,et al.  The Semantic Memory Impairment of Alzheimer's Disease: Category-Specific? , 1996, Cortex.

[21]  M. Folstein,et al.  Clinical diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease , 1984, Neurology.

[22]  Kr Laws,et al.  Strange and neglected domains in category specificity: the 'normal' and the 'nonliving' , 2007 .

[23]  Paul H Garthwaite,et al.  Testing for suspected impairments and dissociations in single-case studies in neuropsychology: evaluation of alternatives using monte carlo simulations and revised tests for dissociations. , 2005, Neuropsychology.

[24]  Paul H. Garthwaite,et al.  Wanted: Fully Operational Definitions of Dissociations in Single-Case Studies , 2003, Cortex.