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Fausto Viader
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Journal Articles
Can We Remember Future Actions yet Forget the Last Two Minutes? Study in Transient Global Amnesia
UnavailablePublisher: Journals Gateway
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience (2011) 23 (12): 4138–4149.
Published: 01 December 2011
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View articletitled, Can We Remember Future Actions yet Forget the Last Two Minutes? Study in Transient Global Amnesia
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for article titled, Can We Remember Future Actions yet Forget the Last Two Minutes? Study in Transient Global Amnesia
Transient global amnesia (TGA) is a clinical syndrome characterized by the abrupt onset of a massive episodic memory deficit that spares other cognitive functions. If the anterograde dimension is known to be impaired in TGA, researchers have yet to investigate prospective memory (PM)—which involves remembering to perform an intended action at some point in the future—in this syndrome. Furthermore, as executive functions are thought to be spared in this syndrome, TGA provides an opportunity to examine the impact of a massive “pure” memory impairment on PM. We assessed 38 patients with a newly designed protocol that distinguished between the prospective (remembering to do something at the appropriate time) and retrospective (remembering what has to be done) components of PM. Moreover, we investigated episodic memory with an anterograde memory task and assessed executive functions, anxiety and mood, as well as their links with PM. We demonstrated that PM is impaired during TGA, with a greater deficit for the retrospective component than for the prospective component. Furthermore, we highlighted a strong link between these two components. Anterograde episodic memory impairments were correlated with retrospective component deficits in TGA patients, although we were able to confirm that executive functions are globally spared. We discuss this pattern of results within the theoretical framework of PM, putting forward new arguments in favor of the idea that PM deficits can occur mainly because of a massive anterograde memory deficit. The clinical consequences of PM impairment in TGA are examined.
Journal Articles
Structural and Metabolic Correlates of Episodic Memory in Relation to the Depth of Encoding in Normal Aging
UnavailablePublisher: Journals Gateway
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience (2009) 21 (2): 372–389.
Published: 01 February 2009
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View articletitled, Structural and Metabolic Correlates of Episodic Memory in Relation to the Depth of Encoding in Normal Aging
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for article titled, Structural and Metabolic Correlates of Episodic Memory in Relation to the Depth of Encoding in Normal Aging
This study set out to establish the relationship between changes in episodic memory retrieval in normal aging on the one hand and gray matter volume and 18 FDG uptake on the other. Structural MRI, resting-state 18 FDG-PET, and an episodic memory task manipulating the depth of encoding and the retention interval were administered to 46 healthy subjects divided into three groups according to their age (young, middle-aged, and elderly adults). Memory decline was found not to be linear in the course of normal aging: Whatever the retention interval, the retrieval of shallowly encoded words was impaired in both the middle-aged and the elderly, whereas the retrieval of deeply encoded words only declined in the elderly. In middle-aged and elderly subjects, the reduced performance in the shallow encoding condition was mainly related to posterior mediotemporal volume and metabolism. By contrast, the impaired retrieval of deeply encoded words in the elderly group was mainly related to frontal and parietal regions, suggesting the adoption of inefficient strategic processes.