Introduction: There is a debate about the ability of patients with Alzheimer's disease to build an up-to-date representation of their memory function, which has been termed mnemonic anosognosia. This form of anosognosia is typified by accurate online evaluations of performance, but dysfunctional or outmoded representations of function more generally.
Method: We tested whether people with Alzheimer's disease could adapt or change their representations of memory performance across three different six-week memory training programs using global judgements of learning.
Results: We showed that whereas online assessments of performance were accurate, patients continued to make inaccurate overestimations of their memory performance. This was despite the fact that the magnitude of predictions shifted according to the memory training. That is, on some level patients showed an ability to change and retain a representation of performance over time, but it was a dysfunctional one. For the first time in the literature we were able to use an analysis using correlations to support this claim, based on a large heterogeneous sample of 51 patients with Alzheimer's disease.
Conclusion: The results point not to a failure to retain online metamemory information, but rather that this information is never used or incorporated into longer term representations, supporting but refining the mnemonic anosognosia hypothesis.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13803395.2016.1231799 | DOI Listing |
J Alzheimers Dis
November 2024
Clinic of Neurology, Medical University, Innsbruck, Austria.
Background: Unawareness or anosognosia of memory impairment is a common phenomenon in patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD). Different findings have been reported regarding its presentation, assessment procedure, and cognitive correlates.
Objective: To assess memory awareness of early AD patients predictively (before memory testing) and online (immediately after performing a memory test).
Commun Med (Lond)
April 2024
Department of Neurology, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
Background: Unawareness is a behavioral condition characterized by a lack of self-awareness of objective memory decline. In the context of Alzheimer's Disease (AD), unawareness may develop in predementia stages and contributes to disease severity and progression. Here, we use in-vivo multi-modal neuroimaging to profile the brain phenotype of individuals presenting altered self-awareness of memory during aging.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeuropsychologia
November 2022
Department of Psychology & Tsinghua Laboratory of Brain and Intelligence, Tsinghua University, Beijing, China.
Individuals with developmental prosopagnosia (DP) are characterized by severe face recognition deficits, yet it remains unknown how they are hindered in the process of unfamiliar face learning. Here we tracked the changes of neural activation during unfamiliar face repetition in DP with fMRI to reveal their neural deficits in learning unfamiliar faces. At the perceptual level, we found that the bilateral fusiform face area (FFA) in individuals with DP showed attenuated repetition suppression for faces, suggesting an inefficient perceptual analysis for learned faces.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Neurol Taiwan
December 2022
National Neuroscience Institute of Singapore, Singapore.
A 56-year-old, right-handed man with no known past medical history presented with sudden onset of inability to recognize familiar individuals in person, including his wife and his mother. He also couldn't recognize himself in the mirror. There was no weakness, numbness, visual disturbances, or speech difficulty.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Alzheimers Dis
September 2021
Department of Psychology, Pontifícia Universidade Católica-Rio (PUC-Rio), Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
Background: Unawareness of disease is a common feature of Alzheimer's disease (AD), but few studies explored its neural correlates. Additionally, neural correlates according to the object of awareness are unexplored.
Objective: To investigate structural brain correlates in relation to different objects of awareness.
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