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Dive into the research topics where Herminia Peraita is active.

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Featured researches published by Herminia Peraita.


Cognitive Processing | 2011

The semantic organization of the animal category: evidence from semantic verbal fluency and network theory

Joaquín Goñi; Gonzalo Arrondo; Jorge Sepulcre; Iñigo Martincorena; Nieves Velez de Mendizabal; Bernat Corominas-Murtra; Bartolomé Bejarano; Sergio Ardanza-Trevijano; Herminia Peraita; Dennis P. Wall; Pablo Villoslada

Semantic memory is the subsystem of human memory that stores knowledge of concepts or meanings, as opposed to life-specific experiences. How humans organize semantic information remains poorly understood. In an effort to better understand this issue, we conducted a verbal fluency experiment on 200 participants with the aim of inferring and representing the conceptual storage structure of the natural category of animals as a network. This was done by formulating a statistical framework for co-occurring concepts that aims to infer significant concept–concept associations and represent them as a graph. The resulting network was analyzed and enriched by means of a missing links recovery criterion based on modularity. Both network models were compared to a thresholded co-occurrence approach. They were evaluated using a random subset of verbal fluency tests and comparing the network outcomes (linked pairs are clustering transitions and disconnected pairs are switching transitions) to the outcomes of two expert human raters. Results show that the network models proposed in this study overcome a thresholded co-occurrence approach, and their outcomes are in high agreement with human evaluations. Finally, the interplay between conceptual structure and retrieval mechanisms is discussed.


Psychoneuroendocrinology | 2013

Increased morning salivary cortisol levels in older adults with nonamnestic and multidomain mild cognitive impairment

César Venero; Carmen Díaz-Mardomingo; Inmaculada Pereda-Pérez; Sara García-Herranz; Lucía Utrera; Azucena Valencia; Herminia Peraita

Exposure to elevated glucocorticoid levels has a detrimental impact on cognitive function. In the present study, elderly individuals were classified according to their cognitive status to (i) cognitively healthy; (ii) amnestic; (iii) nonamnestic; or (iv) multidomain, with an extensive cognitive profiling. Salivary cortisol samples were taken at awakening, evening and night. We report that, compared to cognitively normal control individuals, subjects with nonamnestic or multidomain mild cognitive impairment profiles show increased salivary cortisol levels, immediately after awakening, but not in the evening or at night. Importantly, individuals with amnestic mild cognitive impairment did not show this increase in salivary cortisol levels. We also found that higher morning cortisol levels were associated with a lower global cognitive state, as well as poorer score in executive function and visuoconstructive praxes, verbal fluency, and a worse free immediate recall of items from a word list. These findings open new avenues to the use of salivary cortisol levels as a possible biomarker for nonamnestic and multidomain mild cognitive impairment in elderly subjects.


Current Aging Science | 2011

Evolution of Specific Cognitive Subprofiles of Mild Cognitive Impairment in a Three-Year Longitudinal Study

Herminia Peraita; Sara García-Herranz; Carmen Díaz-Mardomingo

The present work addresses one of the currently most controversial aspects of early detection of Alzheimers disease (AD) and other dementias; that is, the identification of the Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) syndrome-in some cases, prior to AD-in a sample of older subjects who are healthy from the cognitive viewpoint. In a three-year longitudinal study, we classified the participants between 58 and 90 years of age in different cognitive profiles: healthy and MCI (amnestic MCI, non-amnestic MCI, and multi-domain MCI). We followed the evolution of each one by means of the administration on three occasions of an extensive battery of neuropsychological tests. We have found a high percentage of MCI in our sample. Although some of them were amnestic MCIs, this group was not the most frequent. The multi-domain MCI is the one that evolves directly into AD, not the amnestic MCIs. We have found diverse evolutional trajectories over the past three years, some expected, others somewhat unexpected. We also point out the methodological difficulties posed by the administration of certain episodic memory tests, which is not the most appropriate to detect subclinical MCI, due to the effect of practice.


Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology | 2011

Lexical access changes in patients with multiple sclerosis: A two-year follow-up study

Jorge Sepulcre; Herminia Peraita; Joaquín Goñi; Gonzalo Arrondo; Iñigo Martincorena; Beatriz Duque; Nieves Velez de Mendizabal; Joseph C. Masdeu; Pablo Villoslada

The aim of the study was to analyze lexical access strategies in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) and their changes over time. We studied lexical access strategies during semantic and phonemic verbal fluency tests and also confrontation naming in a 2-year prospective cohort of 45 MS patients and 20 healthy controls. At baseline, switching lexical access strategy (both in semantic and in phonemic verbal fluency tests) and confrontation naming were significantly impaired in MS patients compared with controls. After 2 years follow-up, switching score decreased, and cluster size increased over time in semantic verbal fluency tasks, suggesting a failure in the retrieval of lexical information rather than an impairment of the lexical pool. In conclusion, these findings underline the significant presence of lexical access problems in patients with MS and could point out their key role in the alterations of high-level communications abilities in MS.


BioMed Research International | 2014

The Characterization of Biological Rhythms in Mild Cognitive Impairment

Elisabet Ortiz-Tudela; Antonio Martinez-Nicolas; Carmen Díaz-Mardomingo; Sara García-Herranz; Inmaculada Pereda-Pérez; Azucena Valencia; Herminia Peraita; César Venero; Juan Antonio Madrid; Maria Angeles Rol

Introduction. Patients with dementia, especially Alzheimers disease, present several circadian impairments related to an accelerated perturbation of their biological clock that is caused by the illness itself and not merely age-related. Thus, the objective of this work was to elucidate whether these circadian system alterations were already present in patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI), as compared to healthy age-matched subjects. Methods. 40 subjects (21 patients diagnosed with MCI, 74.1 ± 1.5 y.o., and 19 healthy subjects, 71.7 ± 1.4 y.o.) were subjected to ambulatory monitoring, recording wrist skin temperature, motor activity, body position, and the integrated variable TAP (including temperature, activity, and position) for one week. Nonparametrical analyses were then applied. Results. MCI patients exhibited a significant phase advance with respect to the healthy group for the following phase markers: temperature M5 (mean ± SEM: 04:20 ± 00:21 versus 02:52 ± 00:21) and L10 (14:35 ± 00:27 versus 13:24 ± 00:16) and TAP L5 (04:18 ± 00:14 versus 02:55 ± 00:30) and M10 (14:30 ± 00:18 versus 13:28 ± 00:23). Conclusions. These results suggest that significant advances in the biological clock begin to occur in MCI patients, evidenced by an accelerated aging of the circadian clock, as compared to a healthy population of the same age.


Brain Sciences | 2017

Problems in Classifying Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI): One or Multiple Syndromes?

María Díaz-Mardomingo; Sara García-Herranz; Raquel Rodríguez-Fernández; César Venero; Herminia Peraita

As the conceptual, methodological, and technological advances applied to dementias have evolved the construct of mild cognitive impairment (MCI), one problem encountered has been its classification into subtypes. Here, we aim to revise the concept of MCI and its subtypes, addressing the problems of classification not only from the psychometric point of view or by using alternative methods, such as latent class analysis, but also considering the absence of normative data. In addition to the well-known influence of certain factors on cognitive function, such as educational level and cultural traits, recent studies highlight the relevance of other factors that may significantly affect the genesis and evolution of MCI: subjective memory complaints, loneliness, social isolation, etc. The present work will contemplate the most relevant attempts to clarify the issue of MCI categorization and classification, combining our own data with that from recent studies which suggest the role of relevant psychosocial factors in MCI.


Journal of Neuropsychology | 2016

Neuropsychological predictors of conversion to probable Alzheimer disease in elderly with mild cognitive impairment

Sara García-Herranz; M. Carmen Díaz‐Mardomingo; Herminia Peraita


Psicothema | 2006

Análisis de la estructura conceptual de categorías semánticas naturales y artificiales en una muestra de pacientes de Alzheimer

Herminia Peraita; Francisco Javier Moreno


Anales De Psicologia | 1998

Evaluación del deterioro de diversos aspectos de la memoria semántica en pacientes de Alzheimer

Herminia Peraita; María Luisa Sánchez Bernardos


Anales De Psicologia | 2014

Evaluación y seguimiento del envejecimiento sano y con deterioro cognitivo leve (DCL) a través del TAVEC

Sara García-Herranz; María Díaz-Mardomingo; Herminia Peraita

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Sara García-Herranz

National University of Distance Education

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César Venero

National University of Distance Education

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Azucena Valencia

National University of Distance Education

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Inmaculada Pereda-Pérez

National University of Distance Education

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María Díaz-Mardomingo

National University of Distance Education

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Denise Malrieu

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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