Journal Article10.1037/A0014186
Characterizing multiple memory deficits and their relation to everyday functioning in individuals with mild cognitive impairment.
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TL;DR: Findings demonstrate that impairments in memory beyond the traditionally assessed content memory are present in individuals with amnestic MCI and with nonamnesticMCI and show that these noncontent memory processes play a role in supporting IADLs.
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Abstract: The authors evaluated multiple memory processes and explored their contributions to everyday functional limitations in persons with mild cognitive impairment (MCI). Participants included individuals with amnestic MCI, nonamnestic MCI, and healthy older adults. As expected, the amnestic MCI group performed more poorly than the control and nonamnestic MCI groups on a content memory measure. Both MCI groups, however, performed more poorly than controls on the noncontent memory measures of prospective memory, temporal order memory, and source memory. Informants also reported that the MCI groups were experiencing greater difficulty than controls completing instrumental activities of daily living (IADLs). Noncontent memory measures were found to make an independent contribution to IADL performances over and above that of content memory. These findings demonstrate that impairments in memory beyond the traditionally assessed content memory are present in individuals with amnestic MCI and with nonamnestic MCI. The results further show that these noncontent memory processes, which have been linked with executive functioning, play a role in supporting IADLs.
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TL;DR: The cognitive processes that underlie I ADL performance are examined and it is concluded that the accurate and reliable execution of IADL likely draws upon the integrity of a wide range of cognitive processes.
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Activity Discovery and Activity Recognition: A New Partnership
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Functional Disability in Mild Cognitive Impairment: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
TL;DR: Results convincingly demonstrate that MCI is associated with significant difficulties in the performance of complex everyday tasks and appears that functional decline, like cognitive decline, exists on a continuum from healthy aging to dementia onset.
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