Search results for "movement execution"

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Voluntary Imitation in Alzheimer’s Disease Patients

2016

International audience; Although Alzheimer's disease (AD) primarily manifests as cognitive deficits, the implicit sensorimotor processes that underlie social interactions, such as automatic imitation, seem to be preserved in mild and moderate stages of the disease, as is the ability to communicate with other persons. Nevertheless, when AD patients face more challenging tasks, which do not rely on automatic processes but on explicit voluntary mechanisms and require the patient to pay attention to external events, the cognitive deficits resulting from the disease might negatively affect patients' behavior. The aim of the present study was to investigate whether voluntary motor imitation, i.e.…

cognitionAgingbehaviorsCognitive Neurosciencemedia_common.quotation_subject[ SDV.MHEP.GEG ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Human health and pathology/Geriatry and gerontologyInterpersonal communicationaction observationperceptionStimulus (physiology)frontotemporal dementiaApraxia050105 experimental psychologylcsh:RC321-571Developmental psychology03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinevisuomotor integrationPerceptionmedicine0501 psychology and cognitive scienceslcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. NeuropsychiatryOriginal Researchmedia_commonmechanismsmotor imitationAction observation; Alzheimer's disease; Motor imitation; Movement execution; Social interaction; Aging; Cognitive Neuroscience05 social sciencesapraxiasocial interactiontoolCognitionAlzheimer's diseasemedicine.diseaseSocial relation[ SDV.NEU ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Neurons and Cognition [q-bio.NC]movement executionmovementCognitive imitationPsychologyAlzheimer’s disease030217 neurology & neurosurgeryNeuroscienceFrontotemporal dementiaCognitive psychologyFrontiers in Aging Neuroscience
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