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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Autobiographical memory for the differential diagnosis of cognitive pathology in aging

Teresa MayordomoJuan C. MeléndezAlicia SalesMarta E TorresRita Redondo

subject

Autobiographical memory05 social sciencesCognitionmedicine.disease050105 experimental psychologyDevelopmental psychology03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineRetrospective memoryMixed-design analysis of variancemedicineSemantic memoryDementia0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesChildhood memoryPsychologyEpisodic memory030217 neurology & neurosurgeryClinical psychology

description

Aim The present study distinguishes three memory stages across the lifespan, and aims to compare episodic and semantic autobiographical memory in healthy older adults, with amnesic mild cognitive impairment, and with Alzheimer's disease. This information can offer evidence about the way semantic and episodic autobiographical memory work, and how the disease affects them. Methods The sample was composed of 56 people, all aged over 60 years; 15 with amnestic mild cognitive impairment, 12 with Alzheimer's disease and 29 healthy older people. Participants were evaluated with the Autobiographical Memory Interview. Results A mixed anova showed significant main effects of memory and time-period, and significant interactions of memory × group, time-period × group and memory × time × group. Discussion Assessment of autobiographical memory provides information to differentiate amnestic mild cognitive impairment patients from Alzheimer's disease patients. Although the decline in episodic memory starts with the onset of the disease, semantic memory is maintained until moderate stages of dementia. Geriatr Gerontol Int ●●; ●●: ●●–●●.

https://doi.org/10.1111/ggi.12611