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      Public Events and Flashbulb Memories in Parkinson’s Disease

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          Abstract

          Public events and Flashbulb memories were investigated in 12 non-demented patients with Parkinson’s disease (PD) and 12 controls. Knowledge of public events and flashbulbs memories were assessed using a Famous Events Test (EVE 30). Contributions of semantic, episodic, as well as executive functioning and anterograde memory were examined. Results primarily showed that the performances of patients with PD were lower than these of controls in 4 tasks: free recall, specific questions, dating events and date recognition. They also had difficulties in finding the temporal order of 8 events. In contrast, the PD group benefited from events recognition themselves to the same extent as the controls. Secondly, the recall of flashbulb memories (FBM) was lower in the PD group than in the controls. Finally, correlations appeared in PD between the detailed recall of the events with the “recall” abilities of the MATTIS scale, possibly reflect an impairment in rebuilding memories. A positive correlation is also observed with the initiation score of the MATTIS (executive component), suggesting that the difficulties of rebuilding can be related to a dysfunction in accessing information because of a certain degree of frontal amnesia.

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          Most cited references16

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          Flashbulb memories

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            Relations between source amnesia and frontal lobe functioning in older adults.

            A study is reported in which the relations among normal aging, source amnesia, and frontal lobe functioning were explored. Twenty-four older adults (aged 60-84 years) were tested on their ability to remember where they had acquired new factual information; they were also given the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test (WCST), a test of verbal fluency, and other psychometric tests. The degree of source amnesia in this normal sample correlated with age, verbal fluency, and some measures from the WCST. Source amnesia was not related to Performance IQ, however, or to a measure of fact recall. The implications for the relations among aging, memory, and frontal lobe functions are discussed.
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              The relation between source memory and aging.

              Previous research has shown that elderly adults have difficulty recalling the source of recently acquired facts but does not indicate whether source memory is more impaired than fact memory. This study examined old and young subjects' memory for novel facts that had been read to them by 1 of 2 experimental sources either in a random order or in a blocked order. When fact memory was equated in young and old at different levels of performance, the elderly exhibited disproportionate source memory deficits in the blocked condition but not in the random condition. Results suggest that the relation between fact and source memory in the elderly varies across experimental conditions.

                Author and article information

                Journal
                Behav Neurol
                Behav Neurol
                BN
                Behavioural Neurology
                IOS Press
                0953-4180
                1875-8584
                2008
                11 April 2008
                : 19
                : 1-2
                : 49-52
                Affiliations
                1NeuropsychologyCMRR UnitCHU Bellevue42055 Saint Etienne cx 02France
                2Neurology DepartmentCHU Bellevue42055 Saint Etienne cx 02France
                Author notes
                Article
                389181
                10.1155/2008/389181
                5452442
                18413917
                e2788c47-dfb0-4670-9b3a-8badbafa8f71
                Copyright © 2008 Hindawi Publishing Corporation and the authors.

                This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 31 March 2008
                : 31 March 2008
                Categories
                Research Article

                parkinson’s disease,public events memory,flashbulb memory,executive functions,remote memory,anterograde memory

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