Neuropsychological evidence for multiple implicit memory systems: A comparison of Alzheimer's, Huntington's, and Parkinson's disease patients

WC Heindel, DP Salmon, CW Shults… - Journal of …, 1989 - Soc Neuroscience
WC Heindel, DP Salmon, CW Shults, PA Walicke, N Butters
Journal of Neuroscience, 1989Soc Neuroscience
The performances of patients with dementia of the Alzheimer type (DAT), patients with
Huntington's disease (HD), and demented and nondemented patients with Parkinson's
disease (PD) were compared on 2 tests of implicit memory that do not require the conscious
recollection of prior study episodes:(1) a pursuit-rotor motor learning task and (2) a lexical
priming test. The HD patients were found to be impaired on the motor learning but not the
lexical priming task, whereas the DAT patients evidenced the opposite relationship on these …
The performances of patients with dementia of the Alzheimer type (DAT), patients with Huntington's disease (HD), and demented and nondemented patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) were compared on 2 tests of implicit memory that do not require the conscious recollection of prior study episodes: (1) a pursuit-rotor motor learning task and (2) a lexical priming test. The HD patients were found to be impaired on the motor learning but not the lexical priming task, whereas the DAT patients evidenced the opposite relationship on these tasks. The demented, but not the nondemented, PD patients were found to be impaired on both tests of implicit memory. For both the HD and PD patients, deficits on the motor learning task correlated significantly with severity of dementia but not with level of primary motor dysfunction. The noted double dissociation between HD and DAT patients indicates that different forms of implicit memory, all of which are intact in amnesia, are dependent upon distinct neuroanatomic systems. Motor skill learning may be mediated by a corticostriatal system, whereas verbal priming may depend upon the integrity of the neocortical association areas involved in the storage of semantic knowledge. The results for the PD patients suggest that the demented PD patients have endured damage to the neurologic systems subserving both motor learning and lexical priming.
Soc Neuroscience
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