Author:
SCHWARTZ RONALD L.,ADAIR JOHN C.,RAYMER ANASTASIA M.,WILLIAMSON DAVID J.G.,CROSSON BRUCE,ROTHI LESLIE J.G.,NADEAU STEPHEN E.,HEILMAN KENNETH M.
Abstract
Patients with probable Alzheimer's disease
(AD) often have difficulties associated with semantic knowledge.
Therefore, conceptual apraxia, a defect of action semantics
and mechanical knowledge, may be an early sign of this
disease. The Florida Action Recall Test (FLART), developed
to assess conceptual apraxia, consists of 45 line drawings
of objects or scenes. The subject must imagine the proper
tool to apply to each pictured object or scene and then
pantomime its use. Twelve participants with Alzheimer's
disease (NINCDS–ADRDA criteria) and 21 age- and education-matched
controls were tested. Nine Alzheimer's disease participants
scored below a 2-standarddeviation cutoff on conceptual
accuracy, and the three who scored above the cutoff were
beyond a 2-standard-deviation cutoff on completion time.
The FLART appears to be a sensitive measure of conceptual
apraxia in the early stages of Alzheimer's disease.
(JINS, 2000, 6, 265–270.)
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Neurology (clinical),Clinical Psychology,General Neuroscience
Cited by
30 articles.
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