Rogers Sean L, Friedman Rhonda B
Georgetown University Medical Center, Department of Neurology, Room 203B, Building D, 4000 Reservoir Road, NW, Washington, DC 20007, USA.
Neuropsychologia. 2008 Jan 15;46(1):12-21. doi: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2007.08.010. Epub 2007 Aug 22.
Patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) and patients with semantic dementia (SD) both exhibit deficits on explicit tasks of semantic memory such as picture naming and category fluency. These deficits have been attributed to a degradation of the stored semantic network. An alternative explanation attributes the semantic deficit in AD to an impaired ability to consciously retrieve items from the semantic network. The present study used an implicit lexical-decision priming task to examine the integrity of the underlying semantic network in AD and SD patients matched for degree of impairment on explicit semantic memory tasks. The AD (n=11) and SD (n=11) patient groups were matched for age, education, level of dementia and impairment on four explicit semantic memory tasks. Healthy elderly participants (n=22) were matched for age and education. Semantic priming effects were evaluated for three types of semantic relationships (attributes, category coordinates, and category superordinates) and compared to lexical associative priming. Healthy controls showed significant priming across all conditions. In contrast, AD patients showed normal superordinate priming, and significant (although somewhat reduced) coordinate priming, but no attribute priming. SD patients showed no priming effect for any semantic relationship. All groups showed significant associative priming. The results indicate that SD patients do indeed have substantial degradation of semantic memory, while AD patients have a partially intact network, accounting for priming in superordinate and coordinate conditions. These findings suggest that AD patients' impairment on explicit semantic tasks is the product of deficient explicit retrieval in combination with a partially degraded semantic network.
患有阿尔茨海默病(AD)和语义性痴呆(SD)的患者在语义记忆的显性任务(如图像命名和类别流畅性)上均表现出缺陷。这些缺陷被归因于存储的语义网络的退化。另一种解释将AD中的语义缺陷归因于从语义网络中自觉检索项目的能力受损。本研究使用了一项内隐词汇判断启动任务,以检查在显性语义记忆任务上损伤程度匹配的AD和SD患者潜在语义网络的完整性。AD患者组(n = 11)和SD患者组(n = 11)在年龄、教育程度、痴呆程度以及四项显性语义记忆任务的损伤情况上进行了匹配。健康老年参与者(n = 22)在年龄和教育程度上进行了匹配。评估了三种语义关系(属性、类别坐标和类别上位词)的语义启动效应,并与词汇联想启动进行了比较。健康对照组在所有条件下均表现出显著的启动效应。相比之下,AD患者表现出正常的上位词启动效应和显著的(尽管有所降低)坐标启动效应,但没有属性启动效应。SD患者在任何语义关系上均未表现出启动效应。所有组均表现出显著的联想启动效应。结果表明,SD患者确实存在语义记忆的实质性退化,而AD患者的网络部分完整,这解释了上位词和坐标条件下的启动效应。这些发现表明,AD患者在显性语义任务上的损伤是显性检索不足与部分退化的语义网络共同作用的结果。