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Egocentric versus allocentric spatial memory in behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia and Alzheimer's Disease.

Egocentric versus allocentric spatial memory in behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia and Alzheimer's Disease.
Egocentric versus allocentric spatial memory in behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia and Alzheimer's Disease.
Background:
Diagnosis of behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD) can be challenging, in particular when patients present with significant memory problems, which can increase the chance of a misdiagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease (AD). Growing evidence suggests spatial orientation is a reliable cognitive marker able to differentiate these two clinical syndromes.
Objective:
Assess the integrity of egocentric and allocentric heading orientation and memory in bvFTD and AD, and their clinical implications.
Method:
A cohort of 22 patients with dementia (11 bvFTD; 11 AD) and 14 healthy controls were assessed on the virtual supermarket task of spatial orientation and a battery of standardized neuropsychological measures of visual and verbal memory performance.
Results:
Judgements of egocentric and allocentric heading direction were differentially impaired in bvFTD and AD, with AD performing significantly worse on egocentric heading judgements than bvFTD. Both patient cohorts, however, showed similar degree of impaired allocentric spatial representation, and associated hippocampal pathology.
Conclusions:
The findings suggest egocentric heading judgements offer a more sensitive discriminant of bvFTD and AD than allocentric map-based measures of spatial memory.
883 - 892
Tu, S
7503d316-68ff-43d1-8369-a12dfdad0a0b
HJ, Spiers
50a7580e-53b3-4a1c-9e37-33a521166898
JR, Hodges
936bf0c6-b9ab-46eb-a3ed-2a6b719019aa
Piguet, O
edb4727c-9766-4217-8010-1fcd83281548
Hornberger, M
a48c1c63-422a-4c11-9a51-c7be0aa3026d
Tu, S
7503d316-68ff-43d1-8369-a12dfdad0a0b
HJ, Spiers
50a7580e-53b3-4a1c-9e37-33a521166898
JR, Hodges
936bf0c6-b9ab-46eb-a3ed-2a6b719019aa
Piguet, O
edb4727c-9766-4217-8010-1fcd83281548
Hornberger, M
a48c1c63-422a-4c11-9a51-c7be0aa3026d

Tu, S, HJ, Spiers, JR, Hodges, Piguet, O and Hornberger, M (2017) Egocentric versus allocentric spatial memory in behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia and Alzheimer's Disease. Journal of Alzheimer's Disease : JAD, 59 (3), 883 - 892. (doi:10.3233/jad-160592).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background:
Diagnosis of behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD) can be challenging, in particular when patients present with significant memory problems, which can increase the chance of a misdiagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease (AD). Growing evidence suggests spatial orientation is a reliable cognitive marker able to differentiate these two clinical syndromes.
Objective:
Assess the integrity of egocentric and allocentric heading orientation and memory in bvFTD and AD, and their clinical implications.
Method:
A cohort of 22 patients with dementia (11 bvFTD; 11 AD) and 14 healthy controls were assessed on the virtual supermarket task of spatial orientation and a battery of standardized neuropsychological measures of visual and verbal memory performance.
Results:
Judgements of egocentric and allocentric heading direction were differentially impaired in bvFTD and AD, with AD performing significantly worse on egocentric heading judgements than bvFTD. Both patient cohorts, however, showed similar degree of impaired allocentric spatial representation, and associated hippocampal pathology.
Conclusions:
The findings suggest egocentric heading judgements offer a more sensitive discriminant of bvFTD and AD than allocentric map-based measures of spatial memory.

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e-pub ahead of print date: 1 July 2017

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 505201
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/505201
PURE UUID: 7cd7c99c-72e2-4afb-98f9-ca087118e7ba
ORCID for M Hornberger: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2214-3788

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Date deposited: 01 Oct 2025 16:49
Last modified: 02 Oct 2025 02:19

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Contributors

Author: S Tu
Author: Spiers HJ
Author: Hodges JR
Author: O Piguet
Author: M Hornberger ORCID iD

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