All Relations between Alzheimer Disease and semantics

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
A Kertesz, J Appell, M Fisma. The dissolution of language in Alzheimer's disease. The Canadian journal of neurological sciences. Le journal canadien des sciences neurologiques. vol 13. issue 4 Suppl. 1987-02-06. PMID:3791056. accurate assessment of language may turn out to be one of the most reliable predictors of the stages of alzheimer's disease and provides important insights into the cerebral organization of language, semantic access, relationship of semantic and episodic memory and the pathophysiology of the disease. 1987-02-06 2023-08-11 human
M D Kopelma. Recall of anomalous sentences in dementia and amnesia. Brain and language. vol 29. issue 1. 1986-10-30. PMID:3756456. alzheimer patients have a severe impairment of short-term memory, and it is argued that this deficit may make alzheimer patients especially dependent upon the presence of semantic cues in immediate verbal recall--hence, the removal or reversibility of these cues results in a collapse of their performance. 1986-10-30 2023-08-11 Not clear
F J Huff, S Corkin, J H Growdo. Semantic impairment and anomia in Alzheimer's disease. Brain and language. vol 28. issue 2. 1986-09-16. PMID:3730816. semantic impairment and anomia in alzheimer's disease. 1986-09-16 2023-08-11 Not clear
F J Huff, S Corkin, J H Growdo. Semantic impairment and anomia in Alzheimer's disease. Brain and language. vol 28. issue 2. 1986-09-16. PMID:3730816. these results suggest that patients with alzheimer's disease have a semantic impairment characterized by inability to distinguish among objects that are members of the same semantic category, and that this impairment is associated with difficulty producing the names for objects. 1986-09-16 2023-08-11 Not clear
F J Huff, S Corkin, J H Growdo. Semantic impairment and anomia in Alzheimer's disease. Brain and language. vol 28. issue 2. 1986-09-16. PMID:3730816. semantic impairment was present in patients with normal ability to discriminate visually presented shapes, indicating that the semantic deficit in alzheimer's disease occurs independently of abnormalities of visuospatial function. 1986-09-16 2023-08-11 Not clear
F J Huff, S Corkin, J H Growdo. Semantic impairment and anomia in Alzheimer's disease. Brain and language. vol 28. issue 2. 1986-09-16. PMID:3730816. patients tended to make errors on the same items in both confrontation naming and name recognition tests, suggesting that the semantic impairment in alzheimer's disease involves loss of information about specific objects and their names. 1986-09-16 2023-08-11 Not clear