Recent studies of action naming in dementia report contradictory results. Some studies have shown that naming of pictured actions is impaired and indeed worse than naming of pictured objects, whereas other studies report the opposite result, i.e. action naming is better preserved than object naming. One reason for these conflicting results may be that actions vary in their relationships with object knowledge. Instrumental actions, e.g. hammering, require access to knowledge about a specific object (a tool), whereas non-instrumental actions can be named correctly without access to knowledge about a specific object, e.g. running. Moreover, many instrumental action names share a name relationship with the instrument used to perform the action ...
One of the major symptoms of semantic dementia (or progressive fluent aphasia) is profound word-find...
Brain areas involved in action representation (premotor cortex, posterior parietal cortex) are activ...
International audience* Objective * Although tool use disorders are frequent in neurodegenerative di...
To assess noun and verb processing in different dementia types, we tested object and action naming i...
We report data from a group of patients with mild Alzheimer's disease on a range of tasks requiring ...
International audienceIn contrast with widely documented deficits of semantic knowledge relating to ...
We contrast naming from pictures, and reading words, for objects and verbs (actions relating to the ...
In order to explore the possible contribution of the motor system to the representation of verbs, we...
We examined the performance of a group of people with moderately severe Alzheimer's type dementia on...
We report the case of a patient, MC, with Alzheimer's disease, who showed poor ability to name visua...
Brain areas involved in action representation (premotor cortex, posterior parietal cortex) are activ...
Confrontation naming has frequently been administered to Alzheimer's disease (AD) patients as a meas...
We present a detailed analysis of the relations between acting, naming, and recognising objects from...
Poster Session 2 - NamingThese journal issues are the Special Abstract Issue of the Academy of Aphas...
Neuropsychological studies have demonstrated that the production of nouns and verbs can be dissociat...
One of the major symptoms of semantic dementia (or progressive fluent aphasia) is profound word-find...
Brain areas involved in action representation (premotor cortex, posterior parietal cortex) are activ...
International audience* Objective * Although tool use disorders are frequent in neurodegenerative di...
To assess noun and verb processing in different dementia types, we tested object and action naming i...
We report data from a group of patients with mild Alzheimer's disease on a range of tasks requiring ...
International audienceIn contrast with widely documented deficits of semantic knowledge relating to ...
We contrast naming from pictures, and reading words, for objects and verbs (actions relating to the ...
In order to explore the possible contribution of the motor system to the representation of verbs, we...
We examined the performance of a group of people with moderately severe Alzheimer's type dementia on...
We report the case of a patient, MC, with Alzheimer's disease, who showed poor ability to name visua...
Brain areas involved in action representation (premotor cortex, posterior parietal cortex) are activ...
Confrontation naming has frequently been administered to Alzheimer's disease (AD) patients as a meas...
We present a detailed analysis of the relations between acting, naming, and recognising objects from...
Poster Session 2 - NamingThese journal issues are the Special Abstract Issue of the Academy of Aphas...
Neuropsychological studies have demonstrated that the production of nouns and verbs can be dissociat...
One of the major symptoms of semantic dementia (or progressive fluent aphasia) is profound word-find...
Brain areas involved in action representation (premotor cortex, posterior parietal cortex) are activ...
International audience* Objective * Although tool use disorders are frequent in neurodegenerative di...