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Related Experiment Videos

Action naming in dementia.

B Parris1, B Weekes

  • 1University of Sussex, Falmer, Brighton, UK.

Neurocase
|January 15, 2002
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

In dementia, naming actions involving tools is harder than actions without tools. This suggests sensory-motor impairments affect action naming, impacting tool-related tasks.

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Area of Science:

  • Neuroscience
  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Linguistics

Background:

  • Action naming in dementia shows conflicting results, with some studies reporting impairment and others preservation compared to object naming.
  • Actions differ in their reliance on object knowledge; instrumental actions (e.g., hammering) require tool knowledge, unlike non-instrumental actions (e.g., running).
  • Instrumental action names often share a name relationship (homophony) with their associated tool, adding another layer of complexity.

Observation:

  • A case report of patient RS with dementia details impaired object knowledge access across multiple sensory inputs.
  • Despite object deficits, patient RS exhibited relatively preserved action knowledge and naming abilities.
  • An "instrumentality effect" was observed: pictured instrumental actions were named less accurately than non-instrumental actions.

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Findings:

  • The instrumentality effect in action naming was independent of the action-tool name relationship (homophony) and visual complexity.
  • Instrumental actions, requiring specific object knowledge (tools), were more difficult to name than non-instrumental actions.
  • This suggests that impairments in sensory-motor information, particularly related to manipulation, significantly impact instrumental action naming.

Implications:

  • Findings challenge previous assumptions about action naming deficits in dementia.
  • The study highlights the crucial role of sensory-motor representations in naming instrumental actions.
  • Understanding the instrumentality effect offers new insights into the neural underpinnings of action semantics and dementia-related language impairments.