2003
DOI: 10.1023/b:hump.0000008842.71661.20
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Impairment of Emotional Memory and Ability to Identify Emotional States in Patients with Parkinson's Disease

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Cited by 4 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…The PD patients recalled significantly more negative items than neutral and positive items, thus suggesting the existence of a negativity bias in PD. These results contrast with those of Glozman et al (2003), who did not find any effect of emotion in patients with PD. These results are also in contradiction with those of Ma et al (2011) who found, at the onset of PD, a weakened recall of negative stimuli but a preserved recall of positive and neutral stimuli.…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The PD patients recalled significantly more negative items than neutral and positive items, thus suggesting the existence of a negativity bias in PD. These results contrast with those of Glozman et al (2003), who did not find any effect of emotion in patients with PD. These results are also in contradiction with those of Ma et al (2011) who found, at the onset of PD, a weakened recall of negative stimuli but a preserved recall of positive and neutral stimuli.…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 99%
“…Studies interested in the effects of emotions on memory in patients with PD showed contradictory results. For example, Glozman et al (2003) found that recall of emotional words (negative and positive) was not significantly better than that of neutral words in PD patients, contrary to what was observed in healthy participants, but the recognition of emotional words was better than that of neutral words as in healthy participants. However, Jaeger et al (2022) showed that recognition of negative and neutral images was not significantly different in patients with PD contrary to healthy controls.…”
mentioning
confidence: 68%
“…Compared to healthy control subjects, their patients demonstrated worse performance in two out of four ToM tasks, including false belief stories and an “online” (“spy model”) ToM task. Replications of this finding that ToM is impaired in PD were reported in studies using non‐verbal card‐sequencing tasks, false belief and first and second order ToM short stories,41 faux pas recognition stories,12 the “Reading the Mind in the Eyes Test” (RMET)53, 37 and visual material 39. Furthermore, two Japanese review articles on social cognitive deficits in PD are available 54, 55.…”
Section: Parkinson's Diseasementioning
confidence: 81%