False recognition in behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia and Alzheimer's Disease-Disinhibition or Amnesia?
False recognition in behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia and Alzheimer's Disease-Disinhibition or Amnesia?
Episodic memory recall processes in Alzheimer's disease (AD) and behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD) can be similarly impaired, whereas recognition performance is more variable. A potential reason for this variability could be false-positive errors made on recognition trials and whether these errors are due to amnesia per se or a general over-endorsement of recognition items regardless of memory. The current study addressed this issue by analysing recognition performance on the Rey Auditory Verbal Learning Test (RAVLT) in 39 bvFTD, 77 AD and 61 control participants from two centers (India, Australia), as well as disinhibition assessed using the Hayling test. Whereas both AD and bvFTD patients were comparably impaired on delayed recall, bvFTD patients showed intact recognition performance in terms of the number of correct hits. However, both patient groups endorsed significantly more false-positives than controls, and bvFTD and AD patients scored equally poorly on a sensitivity index (correct hits—false-positives). Furthermore, measures of disinhibition were significantly associated with false positives in both groups, with a stronger relationship with false-positives in bvFTD. Voxel-based morphometry analyses revealed similar neural correlates of false positive endorsement across bvFTD and AD, with both patient groups showing involvement of prefrontal and Papez circuitry regions, such as medial temporal and thalamic regions, and a DTI analysis detected an emerging but non-significant trend between false positives and decreased fornix integrity in bvFTD only. These findings suggest that false-positive errors on recognition tests relate to similar mechanisms in bvFTD and AD, reflecting deficits in episodic memory processes and disinhibition. These findings highlight that current memory tests are not sufficient to accurately distinguish between bvFTD and AD patients.
EC, Flanagan
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Wong, S
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Dutt, A
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Tu, S
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Bertoux, M
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Irish, M
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Piguet, O
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Rao, S
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JR, Hodges
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Ghosh, A
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Hornberger, M
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20 July 2016
EC, Flanagan
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Wong, S
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Dutt, A
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Tu, S
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Bertoux, M
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Irish, M
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Piguet, O
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Rao, S
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JR, Hodges
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Ghosh, A
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Hornberger, M
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EC, Flanagan, Wong, S, Dutt, A, Tu, S, Bertoux, M, Irish, M, Piguet, O, Rao, S, JR, Hodges, Ghosh, A and Hornberger, M
(2016)
False recognition in behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia and Alzheimer's Disease-Disinhibition or Amnesia?
Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience, 8.
(doi:10.3389/fnagi.2016.00177).
Abstract
Episodic memory recall processes in Alzheimer's disease (AD) and behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD) can be similarly impaired, whereas recognition performance is more variable. A potential reason for this variability could be false-positive errors made on recognition trials and whether these errors are due to amnesia per se or a general over-endorsement of recognition items regardless of memory. The current study addressed this issue by analysing recognition performance on the Rey Auditory Verbal Learning Test (RAVLT) in 39 bvFTD, 77 AD and 61 control participants from two centers (India, Australia), as well as disinhibition assessed using the Hayling test. Whereas both AD and bvFTD patients were comparably impaired on delayed recall, bvFTD patients showed intact recognition performance in terms of the number of correct hits. However, both patient groups endorsed significantly more false-positives than controls, and bvFTD and AD patients scored equally poorly on a sensitivity index (correct hits—false-positives). Furthermore, measures of disinhibition were significantly associated with false positives in both groups, with a stronger relationship with false-positives in bvFTD. Voxel-based morphometry analyses revealed similar neural correlates of false positive endorsement across bvFTD and AD, with both patient groups showing involvement of prefrontal and Papez circuitry regions, such as medial temporal and thalamic regions, and a DTI analysis detected an emerging but non-significant trend between false positives and decreased fornix integrity in bvFTD only. These findings suggest that false-positive errors on recognition tests relate to similar mechanisms in bvFTD and AD, reflecting deficits in episodic memory processes and disinhibition. These findings highlight that current memory tests are not sufficient to accurately distinguish between bvFTD and AD patients.
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fnagi-08-00177 (1)
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Accepted/In Press date: 4 July 2016
Published date: 20 July 2016
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Local EPrints ID: 505212
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/505212
ISSN: 1663-4365
PURE UUID: e2f23bbe-e9fa-4555-9e2c-303cbc8a652c
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Date deposited: 01 Oct 2025 16:53
Last modified: 02 Oct 2025 02:19
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Author:
Flanagan EC
Author:
S Wong
Author:
A Dutt
Author:
S Tu
Author:
M Bertoux
Author:
M Irish
Author:
O Piguet
Author:
S Rao
Author:
Hodges JR
Author:
A Ghosh
Author:
M Hornberger
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