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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Working Memory and the Enactment Effect in Early Alzheimer’s Disease

Lara A. CharlesworthRichard J. AllenCéline SouchayWendy K. BurnSuzannah M. Morson

subject

medicine.medical_specialtyRecallArticle SubjectWorking memoryDiseaseAudiologyBioinformaticsTask (project management)Free recallEncoding (memory)Clinical StudyEnactment effectmedicinePsychology

description

This study examines the enactment effect in early Alzheimer’s disease using a novel working memory task. Free recall of action-object instruction sequences was measured in individuals with Alzheimer’s disease (n=14) and older adult controls (n=15). Instruction sequences were read out loud by the experimenter (verbal-only task) or read by the experimenter and performed by the participants (subject-performed task). In both groups and for all sequence lengths, recall was superior in the subject-performed condition than the verbal-only condition. Individuals with Alzheimer’s disease showed a deficit in free recall of recently learned instruction sequences relative to older adult controls, yet both groups show a significant benefit from performing actions themselves at encoding. The subject-performed task shows promise as a tool to improve working memory in early Alzheimer’s disease.

10.1155/2014/694761http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2014/694761