MEM&SO protocol: understanding the determinants of social learning in neurodegenerative diseases
Pauline Saliou, Julien Chavant, Serge Belliard, Catherine Merck, Vincent de La Sayette, David Wallon, Olivier Martinaud, Francis Eustache, Mickaël Laisney

TL;DR
This study explores how social contexts affect memory performance in patients with Alzheimer's and primary progressive aphasia to improve learning strategies.
Contribution
The study is the first to assess memory in three social contexts for these neurodegenerative diseases.
Findings
Memory performance will be compared across presence-only, observation, and collaboration contexts.
Differential social scores will be calculated to identify beneficial learning contexts for individual patients.
A multiple comparative case study will identify social, cognitive, and personality variables influencing memory performance.
Abstract
People with neurodegenerative diseases may have difficulty learning new information, owing to their cognitive impairments. Teaching them techniques for learning in social contexts could alleviate this difficulty. The present study will examine the performances of patients with Alzheimer’s disease and patients with the semantic variant of primary progressive aphasia on a memory test administered in three social contexts. The protocol will make it possible to identify determinants of social interactions, social abilities, cognition, and personality that can explain the potentially beneficial effect of social context on learning in these patients. Thirty dyads (patient with primary memory impairment who meets criteria for Alzheimer’s disease paired with caregiver), 16 dyads (patient meeting criteria for semantic variant of primary progressive aphasia paired with caregiver), and 46 dyads…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNeurobiology of Language and Bilingualism · Dementia and Cognitive Impairment Research · Alzheimer's disease research and treatments
