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1.
Encephale ; 34(6): 550-6, 2008 Dec.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19081450

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Autism is an early developmental disorder with cognitive impairments that leads to learning and social integration disabilities. The characterization of memory functions in individuals with autism has been the subject of numerous investigations, with widely varying conclusions. The notable differences between these studies can be attributed to variations in the age, intelligence and level of severity of the participants with autism. LITERATURE FINDINGS: The purpose of our review of the recent literature is to describe the memory function of individuals with autism. Some of the different memory subtypes are intact, others are impaired. Short-term memory (digit span) is not impaired while working memory is impaired in some of its components, but the findings are inconsistent. More recent studies demonstrate reduced spatial working memory abilities in autism and extend previous findings by demonstrating that these deficits are significant when tasks impose heavier demands on working memory. Episodic long-term memory, as measured by free recall, cued recall or recognition tasks, is intact, but participants with autism perform significantly less well than controls as the complexity of the verbal or visual material to be recalled increases. Source or contextual memory involves a variety of characteristics specifying the conditions under which specific items or facts are acquired: it has been investigated in individuals with autism with different methods. Deficits in source memory for temporal information have been found, but there were no reality monitoring deficits. Recent findings indicate that the nature of source memory confusion in autism does not appear to reflect a generalized deficit in attaching context to memories, but rather is dependant on the specific to-be-remembered information that involves social aspects of context. The self-reference effect is missing, with individuals with autism recalling events performed by themselves less well than the events performed by a peer, suggesting they have difficulties in relation to processes involving the self. Studies involving assessment of subjective states of awareness during recognition show less conscious recollection and more feelings of familiarity. Recent investigations are consistent in demonstrating memory impairments related to the failure of subjects with autism to use organizing strategies or meaning to support memory, an effect which grows with the increasing complexity of the material. Memory deficits in autism may be related more to retrieval and less to encoding, as deficit in source memory in participants with autism is largely eliminated when source was supported at test. DISCUSSION: The neuroanatomical basis of the specificities of memory impairment in autism is still uncertain, but it is suggested that autism involves an impairment in the conversion of limbic inputs into medial prefrontal outputs. Memory deficits found in individuals with autism may explain some of the clinical symptoms. Failure to encode all the information, especially its social aspects, may therefore contribute to dysfunction in the social, communication, and reasoning domains. Abnormal memory functioning in autism is also related to more general cognitive impairments, including executive function deficits and central coherence weakness. Evidence of the normality of certain memory capacities, at least in individuals with moderate autistic symptomatology, is encouraging for adaptive improvements in cognitive functioning.


Subject(s)
Autistic Disorder/diagnosis , Memory Disorders/diagnosis , Adolescent , Adult , Attention , Autistic Disorder/psychology , Child , Child, Preschool , Humans , Interpersonal Relations , Memory Disorders/psychology , Memory, Short-Term , Mental Recall , Middle Aged , Neuropsychological Tests , Retention, Psychology
2.
Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol ; 37(9): 441-8, 2002 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12242621

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: The Dominic Interactive was developed in North America to assess a child's perception of her/his own symptoms, which is critical to balance parents' and school professionals' perception. It is a computerized, DSM-IV-based pictorial questionnaire akin to a video game, for children aged 6-11. A strengths and competencies scale displays positive situations. Most children complete the Dominic Interactive 90 situations within 10-15 min. OBJECTIVE: Because of the cultural differences between North American and French children, a study of the appropriateness of the instrument to assess French children was required. METHODS: The CD-ROM-based Dominic Interactive was completed by 253 community children, and by 150 children from outpatient clinics in four French cities. The latter also received clinical diagnoses. Prevalence estimates yielded by the Dominic Interactive in the general population and referred children, relationships between prevalence estimates based on the Dominic Interactive and clinical judgments, and differences between Dominic Interactive scores in sub-samples of children with and without a clinical diagnosis were studied. RESULTS: Significant differences between clinically referred and non-referred children were found for every diagnosis, and between Dominic Interactive scores of referred children with and without a clinical diagnosis with the exception of oppositional disorder. Parental acceptability of the instrument was never a problem, children like it, and clinicians' comments were positive. DISCUSSION: Reference and clinical judgment both indicate that the Dominic Interactive is appropriate to assess child mental health in France. Clinical judgment discrepancies between sites and small numbers are the limitations of this study. CONCLUSION: The instrument performed well in the French context. The potential advantages of using the Dominic Interactive (children enjoy the activity, parents approve of it, it is relatively cost-effective, etc.) suggest its applicability in other settings.


Subject(s)
Mental Disorders/diagnosis , Surveys and Questionnaires , Child , Diagnosis, Computer-Assisted , Female , Humans , Language , Male , Reproducibility of Results , Videotape Recording , Visual Perception
3.
Ann Med Psychol (Paris) ; 152(8): 546-9, 1994 Oct.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7818231

ABSTRACT

The relatively recent development of research on memory has considerably improved knowledge on the subject. The cognitive approach allowed to consider memory as a multiform phenomenon, implicating separate processes and based on independent systems. Memory presently appears as an active process, beginning to get organized as soon as the first interactions between child and environment. Recent research data show that infants memory seems to present specific characteristics, different from those of older subjects. This is a further argument to the theory of independent mnemonic systems, growing at different periods of development.


Subject(s)
Child Development/physiology , Memory/physiology , Age Factors , Child , Child, Preschool , Cognition/physiology , Environment , Humans , Infant
4.
Ann Med Psychol (Paris) ; 152(8): 550-2, 1994 Oct.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7818232

ABSTRACT

Memory, and particularly short-term memory or "working memory" (Baddeley), is involved in language acquisition in children. We have studied short-term memory, with verbal-and non verbal tests, of 8 children suffering from developmental dysphasia compared with other ones, matched in terms of age and performance I.Q. (W.I.S.C.-R.). The digit span did not significantly differ in the two groups, while the visuo-spatial span was lower in the dysphasic group. The memorization of a list of monosyllabic words by dysphasic children was poor in the absence of visual presentation and improved by it. Differences between dysphasic and control-children are unlikely to be due to speech rate which does not significantly differ from one group to the other one. The results suggest the existence, in language disordered children, of cognitive functions disorders much more important than those directly involved in the speech production.


Subject(s)
Language Development Disorders/complications , Memory Disorders/complications , Memory, Short-Term , Case-Control Studies , Child , Child, Preschool , Humans , Intelligence , Language Development Disorders/classification , Matched-Pair Analysis , Memory Disorders/diagnosis , Memory Disorders/epidemiology , Severity of Illness Index
5.
Schizophr Res ; 13(2): 117-26, 1994 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7986768

ABSTRACT

Explicit memory and two forms of implicit memory, repetition priming and cognitive skill learning, were examined in twenty-four schizophrenic patients and twenty-four normal control subjects previously matched for sex, age, and educational level. Two explicit tasks, free recall and frequency monitoring, and two implicit tasks, word completion and the Tower of Toronto puzzle, a variant of the Tower of Hanoi puzzle, were selected. The performance of schizophrenic patients was impaired in both explicit tasks, whereas repetition priming was intact; in the Tower of Toronto puzzle, a deficit was observed in problem solving, but not in skill learning. This dissociation between explicit and implicit memory is not entirely consistent with the hypothesis of a deficiency in effort-demanding information processing. It could be better accommodated by a model of a disturbance in the internal representation of context.


Subject(s)
Attention , Cognition Disorders/diagnosis , Mental Recall , Problem Solving , Schizophrenia/diagnosis , Schizophrenic Psychology , Verbal Learning , Adolescent , Adult , Cognition Disorders/psychology , Decision Trees , Female , Humans , Male , Psychomotor Performance
6.
Encephale ; 18 Spec No 2: 315-28, 1992.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1363948

ABSTRACT

The current interest in memory disorders in schizophrenia results from the way perceptions of schizophrenia--whose organic origin is becoming increasingly evident--and memory--according to which there exist not one, but several memories--have developed. Memory disorders in the schizophrenic cannot be considered in isolation from knowledge accumulated in other areas of the cognitive and neuro-sciences; a more detailed understanding of these disorders requires a comparison of the different cognitive approaches, both with each other and with the neurobiological and clinical approaches, so that they can be integrated. Despite numerous methodological and conceptual difficulties, it now appears to have been established that the schizophrenic's memory deficit should be seen in the context of a wider cognitive deficit, that the memory tasks are not all disturbed and that the memory deficit cannot be identified with one specific form of memory. Thus, iconic formation, short-term memory in the traditionally accepted sense and implicit memory are hardly, if at all, affected; in contrast, the early processing of information, working memory and explicit memory are disturbed, probably to the extent that they require the implementation of strategies to organise the information to be memorized. Finally, in certain tasks, such as those evaluating latent inhibition or negative priming, schizophrenics perform better than normal subjects, suggesting that schizophrenics' cognitive deficit is localised. This profile of memory disorders is compatible with a dysfunction predominating in the frontal and temporo-hippocampal regions. Neuroleptics and anticholinergics have opposite effects on cognitive and mnesic performance, which is improved by the former and aggravated by the latter. The influence of clinical symptoms, positive or negative, institutionalisation of patients and chronic tardive dyskinesia is unclear. Among the theoretical proposals put forward to account for the observed disorders, those relating to a disturbance of the action planning process and to that of the internal representation of context are compatible with the observed memory disorders. All the clinically derived data and those produced by the cognitive and neurosciences indicate a need to reformulate the links between memory, selective attention and evaluation of the relevance of a stimulus, to develop a general model of the reciprocal interactions between cognition and affectivity and to look for the origin of a pathology as complex as schizophrenia, not in a local lesion in an isolated cerebral structure but in a disturbance of the dynamic interactions within a functional, parallel and distributed network of broadly interconnected regions.


Subject(s)
Memory Disorders/etiology , Schizophrenia/complications , Antipsychotic Agents/therapeutic use , Cognition Disorders/diagnosis , Cognition Disorders/drug therapy , Cognition Disorders/etiology , Humans , Memory Disorders/diagnosis , Memory Disorders/drug therapy , Parasympatholytics/therapeutic use , Schizophrenia/drug therapy , Schizophrenia/physiopathology
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