TY - JOUR A1 - Fyndanis, Valantis A1 - Arcara, Giorgio A1 - Capasso, Rita A1 - Christidou, Paraskevi A1 - De Pellegrin, Serena A1 - Gandolfi, Marialuisa A1 - Messinis, Lambros A1 - Panagea, Evgenia A1 - Papathanasopoulos, Panagiotis A1 - Smania, Nicola A1 - Semenza, Carlo A1 - Miceli, Gabriele T1 - Time reference in nonfluent and fluent aphasia BT - a cross-linguistic test of the PAst Discourse Linking Hypothesis JF - Clinical linguistics & phonetics N2 - Recent studies by Bastiaanse and colleagues found that time reference is selectively impaired in people with nonfluent agrammatic aphasia, with reference to the past being more difficult to process than reference to the present or to the future. To account for this dissociation, they formulated the PAst DIscourse LInking Hypothesis (PADILIH), which posits that past reference is more demanding than present/future reference because it involves discourse linking. There is some evidence that this hypothesis can be applied to people with fluent aphasia as well. However, the existing evidence for the PADILIH is contradictory, and most of it has been provided by employing a test that predominantly taps retrieval processes, leaving largely unexplored the underlying ability to encode time reference-related prephonological features. Within a cross-linguistic approach, this study tests the PADILIH by means of a sentence completion task that 'equally' taps encoding and retrieval abilities. This study also investigates if the PADILIH’s scope can be extended to fluent aphasia. Greek- and Italian-speaking individuals with aphasia participated in the study. The Greek group consisted of both individuals with nonfluent agrammatic aphasia and individuals with fluent aphasia, who also presented signs of agrammatism. The Italian group consisted of individuals with agrammatic nonfluent aphasia only. The two Greek subgroups performed similarly. Neither language group of participants with aphasia exhibited a pattern of performance consistent with the predictions of the PADILIH. However, a double dissociation observed within the Greek group suggests a hypothesis that may reconcile the present results with the PADILIH. KW - Time reference KW - past reference KW - future reference KW - encoding KW - retrieval Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1080/02699206.2018.1445291 SN - 0269-9206 SN - 1464-5076 VL - 32 IS - 9 SP - 823 EP - 843 PB - Taylor & Francis Group CY - Philadelphia ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Weymar, Mathias A1 - Bradley, Margaret M. A1 - Sege, Christopher T. A1 - Lang, Peter J. T1 - Neural activation and memory for natural scenes BT - explicit and spontaneous retrieval JF - Psychophysiology : journal of the Society for Psychophysiological Research N2 - Stimulus repetition elicits either enhancement or suppression in neural activity, and a recent fMRI meta-analysis of repetition effects for visual stimuli (Kim, 2017) reported cross-stimulus repetition enhancement in medial and lateral parietal cortex, as well as regions of prefrontal, temporal, and posterior cingulate cortex. Repetition enhancement was assessed here for repeated and novel scenes presented in the context of either an explicit episodic recognition task or an implicit judgment task, in order to study the role of spontaneous retrieval of episodic memories. Regardless of whether episodic memory was explicitly probed or not, repetition enhancement was found in medial posterior parietal (precuneus/cuneus), lateral parietal cortex (angular gyrus), as well as in medial prefrontal cortex (frontopolar), which did not differ by task. Enhancement effects in the posterior cingulate cortex were significantly larger during explicit compared to implicit task, primarily due to a lack of functional activity for new scenes. Taken together, the data are consistent with an interpretation that medial and (ventral) lateral parietal cortex are associated with spontaneous episodic retrieval, whereas posterior cingulate cortical regions may reflect task or decision processes. KW - fMRI KW - posterior parietal KW - repetition KW - retrieval KW - spontaneous memory Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1111/psyp.13197 SN - 0048-5772 SN - 1469-8986 VL - 55 IS - 10 PB - Wiley CY - Hoboken ER -