Social and non-social working memory in neurodegeneration

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Date
2023-05-29Authors
Legaz, AgustinaPrado, Pavel
Moguilner, Sebastian
Baez, Sandra
Santamaria Garcia, Hernando
Birba, Agustina
Barttfeld, Pablo
García, Adolfo M.
Fittipaldi, Sol
Ibañez, Agustín
Corporate Author(s)
Pontificia Universidad Javeriana. Facultad de Medicina. Departamento de Psiquiatría y Salud Mental
Type
Artículo de revista
ISSN
0969-9961 / 1095-953X (Electrónico)
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Abstract
Although social functioning relies on working memory, whether a social-specific mechanism exists remains unclear. This undermines the characterization of neurodegenerative conditions with both working memory and social deficits. We assessed working memory domain-specificity across behavioral, electrophysiological, and neuroimaging dimensions in 245 participants. A novel working memory task involving social and non-social stimuli with three load levels was assessed across controls and different neurodegenerative conditions with recognized impairments in: working memory and social cognition (behavioral-variant frontotemporal dementia); general cognition (Alzheimer’s disease); and unspecific patterns (Parkinson’s disease). We also examined resting-state theta oscillations and functional connectivity correlates of working memory domain-specificity. Results in controls and all groups together evidenced increased working memory demands for social stimuli associated with frontocinguloparietal theta oscillations and salience network connectivity. Canonical frontal theta oscillations and executive-default mode network anticorrelation indexed non-social stimuli. Behavioral-variant frontotemporal dementia presented generalized working memory deficits related to posterior theta oscillations, with social stimuli linked to salience network connectivity. In Alzheimer’s disease, generalized working memory impairments were related to temporoparietal theta oscillations, with non-social stimuli linked to the executive network. Parkinson’s disease showed spared working memory performance and canonical brain correlates. Findings support a social-specific working memory and related disease-selective pathophysiological mechanisms.
Keywords
Working memorySocial processing
Social working memory
Behavioral-variant frontotemporal dementia
Alzheimer’s disease
Parkinson’s disease
Community
Pacientes con Demencia frontotemporal variante conductualPacientes con enfermedad de Alzheimer
Pacientes con enfermedad de Parkinson
Link to the resource
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0969996123001869?via%3DihubSource
Neurobiology of Disease; Volumen 183 , Páginas 1 - 15 (2023)
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