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Featured researches published by Beth A. Ober.


Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology | 1986

Retrieval from semantic memory in Alzheimer-type dementia

Beth A. Ober; Nina F. Dronkers; Elisabeth Koss; Dean C. Delis; Robert P. Friedland

Retrieval from semantic memory, measured by tasks requiring subjects to name items from a given category, was studied in mild Alzheimer-type dementia (Mild-ATD) subjects, moderate-to-severe Alzheimer-type dementia (MS-ATD) subjects, and normal controls. Semantic retrieval performance was shown to be highly sensitive to both the presence and the severity of ATD. Retrieval from both semantic categories and letter categories showed differences in the rate of production of correct responses between subject groups. These rate differences were not due to differences in accessibility of low-dominance semantic category members or low-frequency letter category members. An increase in errors as well as a decrease in correct responses contributed to the performance deficits of the ATD subjects. Furthermore, the pattern of errors changed from Mild- to MS-ATD. Qualitative as well as quantitative differences were also observed in the performance of Mild- versus MS-ATD groups on a third type of semantic retrieval task--the supermarket task. As performance of the ATD subjects declined on these semantic retrieval tasks, so did their performance on other tasks assessing primarily attention, language, and memory. The findings are discussed in terms of the progressive breakdown in both attentional and semantic memory functions which are associated with ATD.


Neuroscience Letters | 1985

Alzheimer's disease: Anterior-posterior and lateral hemispheric alterations in cortical glucose utilization

Robert P. Friedland; Thomas F. Budinger; Elisabeth Koss; Beth A. Ober

We performed dynamic positron emission tomographic studies with [18F]fluorodeoxyglucose in 17 subjects with presumed Alzheimers disease (AD) and 7 healthy aged subjects. Glucose metabolism was depressed by 27% in temporal-parietal cortex of the AD group, as compared to healthy aged controls. This focal impairment in temporal-parietal glucose use was found in all AD subjects. In addition, the AD group showed a striking lateral asymmetry of cortical metabolism not favoring either hemisphere, which has not been previously reported. Relationships between these focal changes and behavioral features of the illness were demonstrated. These results have important implications for the diagnosis and perhaps the etiology of Alzheimers disease.


Neurology | 1988

Longitudinal studies of regional cerebral metabolism in Alzheimer's disease

William J. Jagust; Robert P. Friedland; Thomas F. Budinger; Elisabeth Koss; Beth A. Ober

Measurement of cerebral glucose metabolism in six patients with Alzheimers disease using positron emission tomography demonstrated that hypometabolism remained relatively more severe in parietal cortex than in frontal cortex over time. Lateral metabolic asymmetries were preserved in less severely involved brain regions, but were less stable in parietal cortex.


Neuropsychologia | 1988

Lexical decision and priming in Alzheimer's disease

Beth A. Ober; Gregory K. Shenaut

Patients with probable Alzheimers disease (AD) were no faster at making lexical decisions to targets preceded by a semantic prime than to those preceded by an unrelated prime, in contrast to the facilitatory effect of semantic primes for controls. Fewer errors were made by both subject groups on the targets that followed related items, indicating the preservation of associative relationships in AD. The AD patients and controls showed similar effects on lexical decision of repetition priming, word frequency, and the degree to which nonwords approximated real words. The abnormal priming effect in AD may stem from increased susceptibility to lateral inhibition in the semantic network.


Schizophrenia Research | 1992

Semantic priming of word pronunciation and lexical decision in schizophrenia

Sophia Vinogradov; Beth A. Ober; Gregory K. Shenaut

Experimental assessments of semantic memory structure and function in schizophrenic subjects can be a useful approach for delineating some of the information processing deficits in schizophrenia. In this study, a pronunciation and a lexical decision semantic priming experiment were conducted with 19 schizophrenic subjects and 20 normal controls. A short stimulus-onset asynchrony (250 msec) and a relatively low proportion of related prime-target pairs were used in order to examine automatic priming and in order to avoid the contribution of attentional, controlled processes. On the pronunciation task, schizophrenic subjects showed a significant priming effect, equal to the priming shown by normal controls. However, on the lexical decision task, schizophrenics, unlike normal controls, did not show a priming effect which is significantly greater than zero, even though the group difference in priming effect (interaction of priming effect by group) was nonsignificant. The lack of priming on the lexical decision task is consistent with the hypothesis that schizophrenic subjects may show abnormalities in the realm of post-lexical, controlled information processing. The equal-to-normal priming for schizophrenic subjects indicates that the basic structure of the semantic network, including associations among related concepts, is intact in schizophrenia, and that spreading activation also occurs normally.


Neurology | 1989

Regional cerebral glucose transport and utilization in Alzheimer's disease

Robert P. Friedland; William J. Jagust; R. H. Huesman; Elisabeth Koss; B. Knittel; Chester A. Mathis; Beth A. Ober; B. M. Mazoyer; Thomas F. Budinger

We performed dynamic positron emission tomographic (PET) studies of glucose utilization, using (18F) 2-fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucose (FDG), in patients with probable Alzheimers disease (AD) and healthy age-matched controls, to evaluate blood-brain-barrier glucose transport and glucose utilization rates in the disease. We found no significant differences in rate constants for glucose transport (k1 and k2) and phosphorylation (k3), nor for the vascular fraction (fv), between the 2 groups, although k3 and fv were relatively depressed in temporal cortex in AD. Absolute rates of glucose use were depressed in temporal and parietal cortex, and relative rCMRglc rates were lower in frontal, temporal, parietal, and occipital cortices. These data suggest that in AD bidirectional glucose transport is intact, and that temporal-parietal hypometabolism is present upon a background of widespread cortical metabolic impairment.


Brain and Cognition | 1985

Processes of verbal memory failure in Alzheimer-type dementia.

Beth A. Ober; Elisabeth Koss; Robert P. Friedland; Dean C. Delis

Multiple aspects of verbal learning and memory performance in mild as compared to moderate Alzheimer-type dementia (ATD) were studied with the Buschke selective reminding paradigm. Results show that (1) both groups of ATD subjects depend less on long-term memory (LTM) and more on short-term memory (STM) relative to elderly control subjects, (2) mild ATD subjects show less LTM encoding than moderate ATD subjects, (3) moderate ATD subjects retrieve a smaller portion of the items presumed to be encoded into LTM than do mild ATD subjects, and (4) high-imagery words increase LTM encoding and retrieval as compared to low-imagery words for moderate ATD subjects only. These results are explained by the inability of ATD subjects to attend to more than one component of the list-learning task, in conjunction with differences in the deployment of attention between mild and moderate ATD subjects.


Dementia | 1993

Functional Imaging, the Frontal Lobes, and Dementia

Robert P. Friedland; Elisabeth Koss; Alan J. Lerner; Peter Hedera; William Ellis; Nina F. Dronkers; Beth A. Ober; William J. Jagust

A 58-year-old man developed progressive difficulty with comprehension and verbal output with dementia. Positron emission tomography with 18F 2-fluoro-2-deoxy- D -glucose de


Addictive Behaviors | 1988

Memory in chronic alcoholics: Effects of inconsistent versus consistent information

Beth A. Ober; Richard C. Stillman

Alcoholics and controls were compared on their resistance to misleading information given after a witnessed event. The eyewitness testimony paradigm of Loftus, Miller, and Burns (Semantic Integration of Verbal Information in a Visual Memory Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Learning and Memory, Vol. 4, pp. 19-31, 1978) was used, which is a naturalistic variation of a retroactive interference paradigm. Alcoholics did not show greater suggestibility than the controls, being no more fooled by the misleading, after-the-fact information. In contrast, alcoholics did show significant impairment in discriminating correct from among incorrect verbal statements about the accident. Thus, certain aspects of memory functioning may be preserved even while others are compromised as a result of chronic alcohol abuse.


Archive | 1987

The California verbal learning test

Dean C. Delis; Jonathan Kramer; E. L. Kaplan; Beth A. Ober

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Elisabeth Koss

Case Western Reserve University

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Dean C. Delis

University of California

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Thomas F. Budinger

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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John H. Poole

University of California

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Alan J. Lerner

Case Western Reserve University

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