Title of article :
Sentence Context and Word-Picture Cued-Recall Paired-Associate Learning Procedure Boosts Recall in Normal and Mild Alzheimer's Disease Patients
Author/Authors :
Iodice, Rosario Catholic University of Pereira, Risaralda, Colombia , García Meilán, Juan José Institute of Neurosciences of Castilla y León - University of Salamanca, Salamanca, Spain , Ramos, Juan Carro Institute of Neurosciences of Castilla y León - University of Salamanca, Salamanca, Spain , Small, Jeff A School of Audiology and Speech Sciences - The University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada
Abstract :
Introduction. The aim of this study was to employ the word-picture paradigm to examine the effectiveness of combined pictorial
illustrations and sentences as strong contextual cues. The experiment details the performance of word recall in healthy older adults
(HOA) and mild Alzheimer’s disease (AD). The researchers enhanced the words’ recall with word-picture condition and when the
pair was associated with a sentence contextualizing the two items. Method. The sample was composed of 18 HOA and 18 people
with mild AD. Participants memorized 15 pairs of words under word-word and word-picture conditions, with and without a
sentence context. In the paired-associate test, the first item of the pair was read aloud by participants and used to elicit retrieval of
the associated item. Results. The findings suggest that both HOA and mild-AD pictures improved item recall compared to word
condition such as sentences which further enabled item recall. Additionally, the HOA group performs better than the mild-AD
group in all conditions. Conclusions. Word-picture and sentence context strengthen the encoding in the explicit memory task,
both in HOA and mild AD. These results open a potential window to improve the memory for verbalized instructions and
restore sequential abilities in everyday life, such as brushing one’s teeth, fastening one’s pants, or drying one’s hands.
Keywords :
Sentence Context , Word-Picture Cued-Recall , Paired-Associate Learning , Procedure Boosts Recall , Mild Alzheimer's , Disease Patients
Journal title :
Behavioural Neurology