1997
DOI: 10.1037/0882-7974.12.3.536
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Sources of priming in text rereading: Intact implicit memory for new associations in older adults and in patients with Alzheimer's disease.

Abstract: The contributions of text meaning, new between-word associations, and single-word repetition to priming in text rereading in younger and older adults, and in patients with Alzheimer's disease. (AD), were assessed in Experiment 1. Explicit recognition memory for text was also assessed. Equivalent single-word and between-word priming was observed for all groups, even though patients with AD showed impaired explicit memory for individual words in the text. The contribution of generalized reading task skill to pri… Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(23 citation statements)
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References 81 publications
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“…Because specialized neocortical processors are not typically compromised in amnesia, and because there may be some sparing in the parahippocampal region, amnesic patients might be expected to show normal levels of associative priming when basic perceptual properties encountered during study are reinstated on the indirect test. Results largely confirm these expectations (Gabrieli et al, 1997; Goshen-Gottstein et al, 2000; Verfaellie et al, 2006). However, when this constraint was not met—for example, when paired words were presented sequentially rather than simultaneously—amnesic performance has typically been impaired (Paller and Mayes, 1994; Savage et al, 2002; Carlesimo et al, 2005); this is a finding to which we will return.…”
Section: Associative Priming: Identifying Investigative Pitfalls In Ssupporting
confidence: 67%
“…Because specialized neocortical processors are not typically compromised in amnesia, and because there may be some sparing in the parahippocampal region, amnesic patients might be expected to show normal levels of associative priming when basic perceptual properties encountered during study are reinstated on the indirect test. Results largely confirm these expectations (Gabrieli et al, 1997; Goshen-Gottstein et al, 2000; Verfaellie et al, 2006). However, when this constraint was not met—for example, when paired words were presented sequentially rather than simultaneously—amnesic performance has typically been impaired (Paller and Mayes, 1994; Savage et al, 2002; Carlesimo et al, 2005); this is a finding to which we will return.…”
Section: Associative Priming: Identifying Investigative Pitfalls In Ssupporting
confidence: 67%
“…The ®rst well-studied domain of implicit memory in AD is perceptual repetition priming, in which learning is measured as a change in speed, accuracy, or bias of processing a stimulus due to prior exposure to that stimulus in a comparison with an appropriate baseline condition (Fleischman and Gabrieli, 1998). Mild to moderate AD patients may show normal magnitudes of short-and long-term repetition priming on tasks of perceptual identi®ca-tion of single words (Keane et al, 1991), dot patterns (Postle et al, 1996); fragmented pictures (Carlesimo et al, 1998); objects and unfamiliar faces (Winograd et al, 1999), and of single word (Alberoni et al, 1998) and text (Monti et al, 1997) rereading.…”
Section: Domain-specific Knowledge (Re)learning Through Preserved Impmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Reading words accurately is one validated measure of premorbid intelligence (Filley and Cullum, 1997;Schmand, et al 1998). It is one of the most widely used methods because reading words is also one of the few skills preserved at the moderate-to-severe stages of AD (Bushell and Martin, 1997;Fleishman et al, 1997;Monti et al, 1997). The Wide Range Achievement 338 R. Au et al…”
Section: Neuropsychological Protocol: Tests In Addition To Original Cmentioning
confidence: 99%