Deferred Imitation of Action Sequences in Developmental Amnesia

Author:

Adlam Anna-Lynne R.1,Vargha-Khadem Faraneh1,Mishkin Mortimer2,Haan Michelle de1

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Child Health, London, UK

2. National Institute of Mental Health, Bethesda, MD, USA

Abstract

Abstract The aims of this study were to investigate whether patients with developmental amnesia (DA) associated with bilateral hippocampal volume reduction show an impairment in incidental nonverbal recall of action sequences, and whether the severity of this memory impairment is influenced by the sequence structure (causal vs. arbitrary). Like adult-onset cases of amnesia (McDonough, Mandler, McKee, & Squire, 1995), patients with DA did not differ significantly from their age-, sex-, and IQ-matched controls in spontaneous production of the sequences prior to modeling but recalled fewer target actions and action pairs than the control group after a 24-hour delay, independent of sequence structure. Unlike the patients with adult-onset amnesia, however, the patients with DA showed some memory for both types of sequences after a 24-hour delay. This difference in severity of memory impairment might reflect differences in extent of pathology and/or age at injury.

Publisher

MIT Press - Journals

Subject

Cognitive Neuroscience

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1. References;Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience;2023-03-22

2. Neural Marker of Habituation at 5 Months of Age Associated with Deferred Imitation Performance at 12 Months: A Longitudinal Study in the UK and The Gambia;Children;2022-07-01

3. Early Neurodevelopmental Outcomes Following Exposure to General Anesthesia in Infancy: EGAIN, a Prospective Cohort Study;Journal of Neurosurgical Anesthesiology;2022-05-26

4. A Window into the Preverbal Child’s Mind;Imitation from Infancy Through Early Childhood;2022

5. The effect of napping and nighttime sleep on memory in infants;Interdisciplinary Perspectives on the Relation between Sleep and Learning in Early Development;2021

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