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Conservation of Species, Volume, and Belief in Patients with Alzheimer's Disease: the Issue of Domain Specificity and Conceptual Impairment

Overview
Publisher Routledge
Specialties Neurology
Psychology
Date 2010 Jan 1
PMID 20043252
Citations 1
Authors
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Abstract

Two studies investigated whether patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) suffer high-level and category-specific impairment in the conceptual domain of living things. In Experiment 1, AD patients and healthy young and healthy elderly controls took part in three tasks: the conservation of species, volume, and belief. All 3 tasks required tracking an object's identity in the face of irrelevant but salient transformations. Healthy young and elderly controls performed at or near ceiling on all tasks. AD patients were at or near ceiling on the volume and belief tasks, but only about half succeeded on the species task. Experiment 2 demonstrated that the results were not due to simple task demands. AD patients' failure to conserve species indicates that they are impaired in their theoretical understanding of living things, and their success on the volume and belief tasks suggests that the impairment is domain-specific. Two hypotheses are put forward to explain the phenomenon: The first, a category-specific account, holds that the intuitive theory of biology undergoes pervasive degradation; the second, a hybrid domain-general/domain-specific account, holds that impairment to domain-general processes such as executive function interacts with core cognition, the primitive elements that are the foundation of domain-specific knowledge.

Citing Articles

Concept Innateness, Concept Continuity, and Bootstrapping.

Carey S Behav Brain Sci. 2012; 34(3):152-162.

PMID: 23264705 PMC: 3528179. DOI: 10.1017/s0140525x10003092.

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