The Influence of Feature Type, Feature Structure and Psycholinguistic Parameters on the Naming Performance of Semantic Dementia and Alzheimer’s Patients.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
J. Devlin 1,2, C. Moore 1,3, C. Mummery 1, J. Phillips 1, M. Gorno-Tempini 1, U. Noppenney 1, K. Friston 1, R. Frackowiak 1, and C. Price 1 1 Wellcome.
Advertisements

Method Participants 36 healthy participants (19 females) aged from 17 to 24 years (mean = 20; SD = 1,67) Material Participants were randomly allocated.
Chapter Thirteen Conclusion: Where We Go From Here.
Language Comprehension Speech Perception Semantic Processing & Naming Deficits.
1 Attention and Inhibition in Bilingual Children: evidence from the dimensional change card sort Task By: Ellen Bialystok and Michelle M.Martin.
Physical Symbol System Hypothesis
Cognitive Processes PSY 334 Chapter 13 – Individual Differences in Cognition August 28, 2003.
The ‘when’ pathway of the right parietal lobe L. Battelli A. Pascual - LeoneP. Cavanagh.
Mild Cognitive Impairment as a Target for Drug Development Steven H. Ferris, Ph.D. Silberstein Aging and Dementia Research Center New York University School.
COGNITION AND LANGUAGE FEM 4102 Rozumah Baharudin Department of Human Development and Family Studies Faculty of Human Ecology Nor Sheereen Zulkefly Department.
Memory Impairments. Amnesia Loss of memory ability - usually due to lesion (damage) or surgical removal of various parts of the brain.
1 ROLE OF WORKING MEMORY IN TYPICALLY DEVELOPING CHILDREN’S COMPLEX SENTENCE COMPREHENSION AUTHORS; Shwetha M.P.,Deepthi M. Trupthi T, Nikhil Mathur &
‘All that is psychological is first physiological’ Session 2: Localisation of Brain Function.
Development and Disintegration of Conceptual Knowledge: A Parallel-Distributed Processing Approach Jay McClelland Department of Psychology and Center for.
Perception and the Medial Temporal Lobe: Evaluating the Current Evidence Wendy Suzuki.
Representation, Development and Disintegration of Conceptual Knowledge: A Parallel-Distributed Processing Approach James L. McClelland Department of Psychology.
1 Visual word recognition rules vs. pattern recognition and memory retrieval Erika Nyhus.
Where is the semantic network?. What is the semantic network?  Knowledge of objects, people, concepts and word meanings  Spreading-activation theory.
Defining Mild Cognitive Impairment Steven T.DeKosky, M.D. Director, Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center University of Pittsburgh Pittsburgh, PA.
Last Lecture Dichotic Listening Dichotic Listening The corpus callosum & resource allocation The corpus callosum & resource allocation Handedness Handedness.
Applying the Multimedia Principle: Use Words and Graphics Rather than Words Alone Chapter 4 Ken Koedinger 1.
References Arndt, J. & Hirshman, E. (1998). True and false recognition in MINERVA2: Explanation from a global matching perspective. Journal of Memory and.
Disintegration of Conceptual Knowledge In Semantic Dementia James L. McClelland Department of Psychology and Center for Mind, Brain, and Computation Stanford.
Human Cognitive Processes: psyc 345 Ch. 6 Long-term memory Takashi Yamauchi © Takashi Yamauchi (Dept. of Psychology, Texas A&M University)
Studying Memory Encoding with fMRI Event-related vs. Blocked Designs Aneta Kielar.
MULTIPLE MEMORY SYSTEM IN HUMANS
“When” rather than “Whether”: Developmental Variable Selection Melissa Dominguez Robert Jacobs Department of Computer Science University of Rochester.
Introduction The Coding subtests from the Wechsler scales are a commonly used portion of the Processing Speed Index. They are widely understood to measure.
Emergence of Semantic Knowledge from Experience Jay McClelland Stanford University.
References McDermott, K.B. (1996). The persistence of false memories in list recall. Journal of Memory and Language, 35, Miller, M.B., & Wolford,
Computation in the Brain Neuropsychological Inference with an Interactive Brain: A Critique of the “Locality” Assumption Sang Joon Park.
Semantic Dementia Temporal variant of Frontotemporal dementia Progressive atrophy of one or both temporal lobes Regions of significant gray matter density.
Paradoxical False Memory for Objects After Brain Damage Stephanie M. McTighe 1,2 ; Rosemary A. Cowell 3, Boyer D. Winters 4, Timothy J. Bussey 1,2 and.
Emergence of Semantic Structure from Experience Jay McClelland Stanford University.
Similarity and Attribution Contrasting Approaches To Semantic Knowledge Representation and Inference Jay McClelland Stanford University.
Medio temporal lobe atrophy Lateral Temporal lobe atrophy
Words in the brain Slide #1 김 민 경 Chap 4. Words in the brain.
Agnosia and Perceptual Disturbances March 27, 2006.
Generic Tasks by Ihab M. Amer Graduate Student Computer Science Dept. AUC, Cairo, Egypt.
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
The Emergent Structure of Semantic Knowledge
Conclusions  Results replicate prior reports of effects of font matching on accurate recognition of study items (Reder, et al., 2002)  Higher hits when.
PET Count  Word Frequency effects (coefficients) were reliably related to activation in both the striate and ITG for older adults only.  For older adults,
A Case study by Jessica A. Hehman, Tim P. German, and Stanley B. Klein Department of Psychology, University of California, Santa Barbara 2005 A Presentation.
Emergent Semantics: Meaning and Metaphor Jay McClelland Department of Psychology and Center for Mind, Brain, and Computation Stanford University.
Development and Disintegration of Conceptual Knowledge: A Parallel-Distributed Processing Approach James L. McClelland Department of Psychology and Center.
Mosby items and derived items © 2009 by Mosby, Inc., an affiliate of Elsevier Inc. 1 Chapter 17 Cognitive Impairment, Alzheimer’s Disease, and Dementia.
Mental Organs. Phrenology An important part of popular culture in Victorian England and in Europe during the 19th century.
Long Term Memory LONG TERM MEMORY (LTM)  Variety of information stored in LTM:  The capital of Turkey  How to drive a car.
Chapter 7 Memory. Objectives 7.1 Overview: What Is Memory? Explain how human memory differs from an objective video recording of events. 7.2 Constructing.
Examine one interaction between cognition and physiology in terms of behaviour. Examine (22) – Consider an argument or concept in a way that uncovers the.
This is an umbrella term, not a disease in its own right. It is a term used for a large group of symptoms that adversely affect the brain and can be caused.
All Hands Meeting 2004 Ontologies for Data Mediation Christine Fennema-Notestine, Ph.D.
Chapter 9 Knowledge. Some Questions to Consider Why is it difficult to decide if a particular object belongs to a particular category, such as “chair,”
Language and Brain Summer, 2017.
Priming of Landmarks During Object-Location Tasks:
Psychology 209 – Winter 2017 January 31, 2017
What is cognitive psychology?
Neurobiology of Learning and Memory
Models of Memory SAQ workshop.
Development and Disintegration of Conceptual Knowledge: A Parallel-Distributed Processing Approach James L. McClelland Department of Psychology and Center.
Starter: Define these key terms from Piaget’s theory of cognitive development: Egocentric Thinking Concrete Logical Thinking Abstract Logical Thinking.
Topic 2 – Cognitive Psychology
The involvement of visual and verbal representations in a quantitative and a qualitative visual change detection task. Laura Jenkins, and Dr Colin Hamilton.
The need for the assessment of hearing loss as part of the dementia diagnosis Jenna Littlejohn Department of Neuroscience.
THE NATURE of LEARNER LANGUAGE
Emergence of Semantics from Experience
Gestalt Theory.
Wallis, JD Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute UC, Berkeley
Bruce & Young’s model of face recognition (1986)
Presentation transcript:

The Influence of Feature Type, Feature Structure and Psycholinguistic Parameters on the Naming Performance of Semantic Dementia and Alzheimer’s Patients. Department of Psychology, University College London, UK Krist Noonan * & Peter Garrard (*) Significant at.05, (**) Significant at.01. * correspondence The ability to understand and interpret certain categories of conceptual knowledge can be lost following focal or degenerative brain damage. “Living kinds” are most frequently affected with non-living concepts often remaining “relatively” intact. This phenomena is know as category specific semantic impairment. The underlying principles of semantic memory are often disputed; different accounts exist based on feature type, feature structure and psycholinguistic parameters. No current studies have investigated the predictive power of these theories on a single set of patients How is conceptual knowledge organized? Three Explanations of Category Specific Semantic Impairments Analysis 2: Predicting Group & Individual Patient Naming Summary and Discussion References [1] Warrington, E. K., & Shallice, T. (1984). Category-specific semantic impairments. Brain, 107: [2] Devlin, J.T., Gonnerman, L.M., Andersen, E.S. & Seidenberg, M.S. (1998) Category- specific semantic deficits in focal and widespread brain damage: A computational account. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 10, [3] Sartori, G. & Lombardi, L. (2004). Semantic relevance and semantic disorders. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 16, Analysis 3: Feature Structure and Disease Severity Analysis 1: Performance Across Domain & Modality Introduction [1] Knowledge for living concepts is differentially reliant on perceptual information. Nonliving on functional information e.g. what a concept is used for (Fig 1, Analyses 1). [2] Living concepts have more features which are shared and intercorrelated across items. Nonliving have more distinctive features. Patterns of knowledge impairment change as feature structure interacts with disease progression (Fig 2, Analyses 3). [3] Semantic Relevance is the organizing principle of semantic memory. A feature is high in relevance when its consistently used across individuals to identify a concept (dominance) and distinguishes that concept from other exemplars (distinctiveness) (Fig 3, Analyses 2). Two patients show a category advantage for nonliving concepts. Only one of the two shows an advantage for functional descriptions. Five patients show better performance for functional descriptions but no accompanying advantage for non- living concepts. RESULTS (accuracy across domain & modality of description) 5 Semantic Dementia (SD) & 5 Alzheimer’s (AD) patients were tested on a naming to description task. 58 living & 64 non-living concepts. Each concept had two descriptions one emphasizing perceptual, the other emphasizing functional information METHOD Individual and group regression analyses were conducted to predict individual item naming. Including feature level predictor variables (relevance, dominance, distinctiveness & feature intercorrelation ), psycholinguistic variables (familiarity, word frequency & age of acquisition). METHOD RESULTS: Which variables influenced naming? CONCLUSION The Sensory functional theory cannot accommodate the findings of this analysis which indicates that deficits in identifying concepts from perceptual knowledge can arise without the accompanying deficit for identifying living concepts. CONCLUSIONS: Descriptions emphasizing functional knowledge. Psycholinguistic variables, especially familiarity. Semantic Relevance for SD group, although largely a result of the influence of patient VH. PREDICTIONS & METHOD Non-Living concepts should be consistently predicted by feature distinctiveness (Devlin et al, 1998). Living concepts should be predicted by the interaction between the proportion of shared and intercorrelated features in the initial stages of dementia (Devlin et al, 1998). Tested using individual regressions for each patient on separate living and non-living item subsets. RESULTS CONCLUSION The conceptual structure approach could not account for the majority of the patients’ naming performance. Living vs Non-Living Perceptual vs Functional (**) (*) (**) (*) (**) (*) (**) No category advantage remained when psycholinguistic variables were accounted for. Semantic Relevance Theory is a poor predictor of successful naming. Better performance based on functional Knowledge may be related to areas of temporal lobe atrophy seen in SD & AD. Variables included: (dominance, distinctiveness, feature intercorrelation, intercorrelation* distinctiveness & relevance). Patients regression predictors plotted on a stylised representation of Devlin et al’s (1998) concept loss curves. KH & RB only patients to have living concepts predicted by shared / intercorrelated features. No patient showed non-living performance to be predicted by distinctiveness 1.All three of the feature level theories considered proved insufficient to explain the patterns of patient performance. 2.In contrast psycholinguistic variables consistently predicted naming performance across individual patients and both dementia groups. These findings indicate that concepts which are frequently encountered and acquired at an early age are more resistant to loss. 3. Descriptions composed of functional attribute knowledge provided an advantage for naming in many of the patients studied. It is proposed that this may result from the progressive damage to the inferior lateral and medial temporal lobes seen in SD and AD respectively. These brain regions are often associated with high-level visual knowledge and this may account for the patients impairments on naming concepts from perceptual (often visual) attribute knowledge.