The Semantic Memory Impairment of Alzheimer's Disease: Category-Specific?

We addressed the question of whether Alzheimer's Disease (AD) causes a selective impairment for knowledge of living things. Although we replicated a previous finding that AD subjects name pictures of living things less accurately than pictures of nonliving things, we also failed to observe this selective impairment when we used two new stimulus sets, which more tightly controlled the overall naming difficulty of the living and nonliving items. We conclude that, whereas some individuals may have bona fide selective impairments in semantic memory as a result of herpes simplex encephalitis or head injury, AD does not generally give rise to selective impairments in knowledge of living things.

[1]  James L. McClelland,et al.  A computational model of semantic memory impairment: modality specificity and emergent category specificity. , 1991 .

[2]  B. Ober,et al.  Lexical decision and priming in Alzheimer's disease , 1988, Neuropsychologia.

[3]  Alex Martin,et al.  Word production and comprehension in Alzheimer's diseáse: The breakdown of semantic knowledge , 1983, Brain and Language.

[4]  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.

[5]  M. Farah,et al.  A category-specific naming impairment after temporal lobectomy , 1996, Neuropsychologia.

[6]  E. Warrington,et al.  CATEGORY SPECIFIC ACCESS DYSPHASIA , 1983 .

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

[8]  M. Grossman,et al.  Verbal and nonverbal fluency in patients with probable Alzheimer's disease. , 1994 .

[9]  R. Katzman.,et al.  Pathological verification of ischemic score in differentiation of dementias , 1980, Annals of neurology.

[10]  N Butters,et al.  Episodic and semantic memory: a comparison of amnesic and demented patients. , 1987, Journal of clinical and experimental neuropsychology.

[11]  S. Corkin,et al.  Category knowledge in Alzheimer's disease: normal organization and a general retrieval deficit. , 1992, Psychology and aging.

[12]  D. Delis,et al.  Retrieval from semantic memory in Alzheimer-type dementia. , 1986, Journal of clinical and experimental neuropsychology.

[13]  A J Parkin,et al.  Naming Impairments following Recovery from Herpes Simplex Encephalitis: Category-Specific? , 1992, The Quarterly journal of experimental psychology. A, Human experimental psychology.

[14]  D. Salmon,et al.  The nature of the naming deficit in Alzheimer's and Huntington's disease. , 1991, Brain : a journal of neurology.

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

[16]  Elaine Funnell,et al.  Categories of knowledge? unfamiliar aspects of living and nonliving things , 1992 .

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

[18]  Suzanne Corkin,et al.  Semantic impairment and anomia in Alzheimer's disease , 1986, Brain and Language.

[19]  M. M. Meyer,et al.  Can recognotion of living things be selectively impaired? , 1991, Neuropsychologia.

[20]  Martha J Farah,et al.  The Living/Nonliving Dissociation is Not an Artifact: Giving an A Priori Implausible Hypothesis a Strong Test. , 1996, Cognitive neuropsychology.

[21]  V. Pietrini,et al.  Recovery from herpes simplex encephalitis: selective impairment of specific semantic categories with neuroradiological correlation. , 1988, Journal of neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry.

[22]  Myrna F. Schwartz,et al.  Modular deficits in Alzheimer-type dementia , 1990 .

[23]  J. G. Snodgrass,et al.  A standardized set of 260 pictures: norms for name agreement, image agreement, familiarity, and visual complexity. , 1980, Journal of experimental psychology. Human learning and memory.

[24]  G. Humphreys,et al.  Calling a squirrel a squirrel but a canoe a wigwam: a category-specific deficit for artefactual objects and body parts , 1992 .

[25]  E. Warrington Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology the Selective Impairment of Semantic Memory the Selective Impairment of Semantic Memory , 2022 .

[26]  Giuseppe Sartori,et al.  The oyster with four legs: A neuropsychological study on the interaction of visual and semantic information , 1998 .

[27]  David Gaffan,et al.  A Spurious Category-Specific Visual Agnosia for Living Things in Normal Human and Nonhuman Primates , 1993, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.

[28]  A. Caramazza,et al.  Category-specific naming and comprehension impairment: a double dissociation. , 1991, Brain : a journal of neurology.

[29]  M. Grossman,et al.  Picture Comprehension in Probable Alzheimer′s Disease , 1994, Brain and Cognition.

[30]  M. Silveri,et al.  Interaction between vision and language in category-specific semantic impairment , 1988 .

[31]  E. Warrington,et al.  Categories of knowledge. Further fractionations and an attempted integration. , 1987, Brain : a journal of neurology.