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Martial Van Der Linden - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • patients with alzheimer s disease use metamemory to attenuate the jacoby Whitehouse illusion
    Neuropsychologia, 2009
    Co-Authors: Sylvie Willems, Sophie Germain, Eric Salmon, Martial Van Der Linden
    Abstract:

    Patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) relying predominantly on familiarity for recognition, research has suggested that they may be particularly susceptible to memory illusions driven by conceptual fluency. Using the Jacoby and Whitehouse [Jacoby, L.L., & Whitehouse, K. (1989). An illusion of memory: False recognition influenced by unconscious perception. Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 118, 126-135] illusion paradigm, we extended these findings and found that AD patients were also sensitive to perceptually driven false recognition. However, AD patients were equally able to disregard perceptual fluency when there was a shift in the sensory modality of the study and test stages. Overall, these findings support the notion that patients with AD can be susceptible to fluency-based memory illusions but these patients can strategically control the fluency attribution following their metamemory expectation in exactly the same way as elderly adults and young adults.

  • Patients with Alzheimer's disease use metamemory to attenuate the Jacoby–Whitehouse illusion
    Neuropsychologia, 2009
    Co-Authors: Sylvie Willems, Sophie Germain, Eric Salmon, Martial Van Der Linden
    Abstract:

    Patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) relying predominantly on familiarity for recognition, research has suggested that they may be particularly susceptible to memory illusions driven by conceptual fluency. Using the Jacoby and Whitehouse [Jacoby, L.L., & Whitehouse, K. (1989). An illusion of memory: False recognition influenced by unconscious perception. Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 118, 126-135] illusion paradigm, we extended these findings and found that AD patients were also sensitive to perceptually driven false recognition. However, AD patients were equally able to disregard perceptual fluency when there was a shift in the sensory modality of the study and test stages. Overall, these findings support the notion that patients with AD can be susceptible to fluency-based memory illusions but these patients can strategically control the fluency attribution following their metamemory expectation in exactly the same way as elderly adults and young adults.

Sylvie Willems - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • patients with alzheimer s disease use metamemory to attenuate the jacoby Whitehouse illusion
    Neuropsychologia, 2009
    Co-Authors: Sylvie Willems, Sophie Germain, Eric Salmon, Martial Van Der Linden
    Abstract:

    Patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) relying predominantly on familiarity for recognition, research has suggested that they may be particularly susceptible to memory illusions driven by conceptual fluency. Using the Jacoby and Whitehouse [Jacoby, L.L., & Whitehouse, K. (1989). An illusion of memory: False recognition influenced by unconscious perception. Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 118, 126-135] illusion paradigm, we extended these findings and found that AD patients were also sensitive to perceptually driven false recognition. However, AD patients were equally able to disregard perceptual fluency when there was a shift in the sensory modality of the study and test stages. Overall, these findings support the notion that patients with AD can be susceptible to fluency-based memory illusions but these patients can strategically control the fluency attribution following their metamemory expectation in exactly the same way as elderly adults and young adults.

  • Patients with Alzheimer's disease use metamemory to attenuate the Jacoby–Whitehouse illusion
    Neuropsychologia, 2009
    Co-Authors: Sylvie Willems, Sophie Germain, Eric Salmon, Martial Van Der Linden
    Abstract:

    Patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) relying predominantly on familiarity for recognition, research has suggested that they may be particularly susceptible to memory illusions driven by conceptual fluency. Using the Jacoby and Whitehouse [Jacoby, L.L., & Whitehouse, K. (1989). An illusion of memory: False recognition influenced by unconscious perception. Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 118, 126-135] illusion paradigm, we extended these findings and found that AD patients were also sensitive to perceptually driven false recognition. However, AD patients were equally able to disregard perceptual fluency when there was a shift in the sensory modality of the study and test stages. Overall, these findings support the notion that patients with AD can be susceptible to fluency-based memory illusions but these patients can strategically control the fluency attribution following their metamemory expectation in exactly the same way as elderly adults and young adults.

Albert Aynsley-green - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • Comparison of the use of Tanner and Whitehouse, NCHS, and Cambridge standards in infancy.
    Archives of disease in childhood, 1993
    Co-Authors: Charlotte M Wright, A Waterston, Albert Aynsley-green
    Abstract:

    The British (Tanner and Whitehouse) and American (National Center for Health Statistics, NCHS) growth standards are widely used internationally, although the data are now over 30 years old. Routine weight data was retrieved from the child health records of a complete annual cohort of 3418 children aged 18-30 months to test the validity of these standards for modern infants. Compared with the Tanner and Whitehouse standards, Newcastle children rose initially and then fell a mean of 0.7 SDs between 6 weeks and 18 months, resulting in a threefold difference in the proportion of children below the 3rd centile at different ages. NCHS standards showed a similar pattern. When compared with modern standards from the Cambridge growth study, there was a much closer match, although Newcastle children showed a slight gain by the age of 1 year. Existing standards for weight introduce inaccuracy into the estimation of centile position in the early months of life. As both standards show similar problems this probably represents a real secular change due to changes in infant nutrition. These findings support the need to develop new national growth reference standards.

G Schellong - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

Bruce J. Hunt - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.