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[P3–438]: IMPACT OF NEUROPSYCHIATRIC SYMPTOMOLOGY ON EMOTION RECOGNITION IN BV FTD AND AD
Author(s) -
Jeffs Stephen,
Mônego Bruna,
Barbosa Izabela,
Leite Flávia Chiacchio,
Caramelli Paulo,
Teixeira Antônio Lúcio,
Guimaraes Henrique Cerqueira,
Gambogi Leandro Boson,
Bertoux Maxime,
Hornberger Michael,
Cruz de Souza Leonardo
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
alzheimer's and dementia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.713
H-Index - 118
eISSN - 1552-5279
pISSN - 1552-5260
DOI - 10.1016/j.jalz.2017.06.1656
Subject(s) - disgust , sadness , perseveration , psychology , frontotemporal dementia , happiness , anger , surprise , emotion recognition , cognitive psychology , cognition , audiology , clinical psychology , dementia , psychiatry , disease , medicine , social psychology , neuroscience , pathology
C.I.: 0.045-0.061, CFI1⁄40.954, SRMR1⁄40.046). In addition, cognitively normal participants with abnormal CSF-Ab42/40 and/or CSF-Ab42/tau values showed significantly lower (age-adjusted) performance in MEM and EXEC (Cohen’s d1⁄4 0.4-0.5, p<0.05; Figure 1). No significant differences were found for LANG, WM and VIS. Conclusions: The results yield a first psychometric basis for using the proposed 5-factor structure in DELCODE. The structure matches well with those of the ADNI (Park et al. 2012) and WRAP (Dowling et al. 2010) cohort, thus yielding excellent comparability to these studies, and seems to capture subtle cognitive deficits in domains known to be affected earliest in AD.