2008
DOI: 10.1080/02687030701391065
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I don't know what I know: Evidence of preserved semantic knowledge but impaired metalinguistic knowledge in adults with probable Alzheimer's disease

Abstract: Background. At what point does "not telling" become "not knowing"? Previous research shows that Alzheimer's disease (AD) affects people's ability to define words, primarily, it has been thought, because AD destroys the semantic representations of words that the patients can no longer define. We investigate an alternative hypothesis, which is the idea that AD affects metalinguistic ability, which in turn affects people's ability to produce good definitions. Aims. Does AD affect metalinguistic abilities? Are def… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…Hence in addition to language-specific impairments resulting from degeneration of the language centres, we should also observe language difficulties arising from the progressive loss of deliberative processes. Harley, Jessiman, Astell and MacAndrew (2008) found that some people with probable Alzheimer's disease (AD) Deliberative processing across the lifespan frequently have access to information that they appear to have lost (see also Astell & Harley, 1998. We tested a group of elderly people with moderate AD on a word definition task.…”
Section: Language Processing In Alzheimer's Diseasementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Hence in addition to language-specific impairments resulting from degeneration of the language centres, we should also observe language difficulties arising from the progressive loss of deliberative processes. Harley, Jessiman, Astell and MacAndrew (2008) found that some people with probable Alzheimer's disease (AD) Deliberative processing across the lifespan frequently have access to information that they appear to have lost (see also Astell & Harley, 1998. We tested a group of elderly people with moderate AD on a word definition task.…”
Section: Language Processing In Alzheimer's Diseasementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Harley, Jessiman, MacAndrew and Astell (10) argue that, for this reason, metalinguistic abilities are affected in various types of dementia. Specifically, these authors found that the ability to produce adequate definitions is affected in people with Alzheimer's disease.…”
Section: Conceptual Review From a Clinical-functional Perspectivementioning
confidence: 99%
“…'s background, increasing metalinguistic awareness and skills is suggested to be incorporated in his intervention plan. Natural metalinguistic abilities are a special type of executive process, involved in controlling and manipulating language(Harley, Jessiman, MacAndrew, & Astell, 2008). According to Hernández-Sacristán et al (2011), "Metalinguistic skills can be considered a prerequisite for the appropriate use of language in context and for functional communication".…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%