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Experimental Aging Research
An International Journal Devoted to the Scientific Study of the Aging Process
Volume 38, 2012 - Issue 2
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Original Articles

Event-Related Potentials Elicited By Face Identity Processing In Elderly Adults With Cognitive Impairment

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Pages 220-245 | Received 21 Aug 2010, Accepted 10 Feb 2011, Published online: 09 Mar 2012
 

Abstract

Background/Study Context: Patients with mild Alzheimer's disease and mild cognitive impairment show selective loss of knowledge regarding facial identification.

Methods: The authors focus on decline effects on event-related potentials (ERPs) P100, N170, N250, and N400, associated with the processing of facial identity. Different famous and unknown faces were presented in explicit and implicit familiarity tasks.

Results: Patients with cognitive impairment showed modulations on P100 and N170 and greater activity in prefrontal areas in the earlier component. In healthy elderly individuals, but not in patients, famous faces modulated the long-latency ERPs N250 and N400, related to the access and retrieval of stored facial-related information, respectively.

Conclusion: ERPs have potential as markers of neurodegenerative disease such as dementia. The neural systems supporting facial identification may differ in normal and cognitively impaired older adults.

Acknowledgments

This work was financed by grants from the Spanish Ministry for Education and Culture (AP2001-0664) and the Spanish Directorate-General for Research (SEJ2007-67858 and SEJ2006-07089), as well as partially supported by UAM-Grupo Santander (CEAL/2006).

Notes

Note. BA = Brodmann area.

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