John D. E. Gabrieli
Rush University Medical Center
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Featured researches published by John D. E. Gabrieli.
Behavioral Neuroscience | 1995
John D. E. Gabrieli; Regina McGlinchey-Berroth; Maria C. Carrillo; Mark A. Gluck; Laird S. Cermak; John F. Disterhoft
The status of classical conditioning in human amnesia was examined by comparing conditioning of the eyeblink response (the unconditional response) to a tone conditioned stimulus (CS) paired with an airpuff unconditioned stimulus (US) in the delay paradigm between 7 amnesic and 7 age- and education-matched normal control participants. Amnesic patients exhibited normal baseline performance in pseudoconditioning and normal acquisition and extinction of conditioned responses in terms of the number, latency, and magnitude of eyeblinks. These results indicate that in humans, as in rabbits, brain structures critical for declarative memory are not essential for the acquisition of elementary CS-US associations.
Neuropsychology (journal) | 1996
John D. E. Gabrieli; Jaswinder Singh; Glenn T. Stebbins; Christopher G. Goetz
An iris fixation intraocular lens comprising an optical portion and a side support portion comprising a pair of pincer-like extensions for holding a portion of iris tissue.
Neuropsychology (journal) | 1998
Maria Stone; John D. E. Gabrieli; Glenn T. Stebbins; Edith V. Sullivan
Working memory and its contribution to performance on strategic memory tests in schizophrenia were studied. Patients (n = 18) and control participants (n = 15), all men, received tests of immediate memory (forward digit span), working memory (listening, computation, and backward digit span), and long-term strategic (free recall, temporal order, and self-ordered pointing) and nonstrategic (recognition) memory. Schizophrenia patients performed worse on all tests. Education, verbal intelligence, and immediate memory capacity did not account for deficits in working memory in schizophrenia patients. Reduced working memory capacity accounted for group differences in strategic memory but not in recognition memory. Working memory impairment may be central to the profile of impaired cognitive performance in schizophrenia and is consistent with hypothesized frontal lobe dysfunction associated with this disease. Additional medial-temporal dysfunction may account for the recognition memory deficit.
Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory and Cognition | 1997
Anthony D. Wagner; John D. E. Gabrieli; Mieke Verfaellie
Dual-process theories of recognition posit that a perceptual familiarity process contributes to both explicit recognition and implicit perceptual memory. This putative single familiarity process has been indexed by inclusion-exclusion, remember-know, and repetition priming measures. The present studies examined whether these measures identify a common familiarity process. Familiarity-based explicit recognition (as indexed by the inclusion-exclusion and the independence remember-know procedures) increased with conceptual processing. In contrast, implicit word-identification priming and familiarity-based word-stem completion (as indexed by inclusion-exclusion) increased with study-test perceptual similarity. These dissociations indicate that familiarity-based explicit recognition may be more sensitive to conceptual than to perceptual processing and is functionally distinct from the perceptual familiarity process mediating implicit perceptual memory.
Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory and Cognition | 1997
Chandan J. Vaidya; John D. E. Gabrieli; Margaret M. Keane; Laura A. Monti; Humberto Gutierrez-Rivas; Melissa Zarella
The authors examined effects of encoding manipulations on 4 conceptual-implicit memory tasks: word-cued association, category-cued association, category verification, and abstract/concrete classification. Study-phase conceptual elaboration enhanced priming for word-cued association with weakly associated words (Experiment 3), and for category-cued association with high- and low-dominance exemplars (Experiments 4 and 5), but did not enhance priming for word-cued association with strongly associated words (Experiments 1 and 2), for category verification with high- and low-dominance exemplars (Experiment 5), or for abstract/concrete classification (Experiment 7). Forms of priming that were unaffected by conceptual elaboration were not mediated by perceptual processes because they were unaffected by study-test modality changes (Experiments 6 and 8). The dissociative effects of conceptual elaboration on conceptual-implicit tasks suggest that at least 2 dissociable mechanisms mediate conceptual priming.
Journal of Experimental Psychology: General | 1999
John D. E. Gabrieli; Chandan J. Vaidya; Maria Stone; Wendy S. Francis; Sharon L. Thompson-Schill; Debra A. Fleischman; Jared R. Tinklenberg; Jerome A. Yesavage; Robert S. Wilson
Four experiments examined a distinction between kinds of repetition priming which involve either the identification of the form or meaning of a stimulus or the production of a response on the basis of a cue. Patients with Alzheimers disease had intact priming on picture-naming and category-exemplar identification tasks and impaired priming on word-stem completion and category-exemplar production tasks. Division of study-phase attention in healthy participants reduced priming on word-stem completion and category-exemplar production tasks but not on picture-naming and category-exemplar identification tasks. The parallel dissociations in normal and abnormal memory cannot be explained by implicit-explicit or perceptual-conceptual distinctions but are explained by an identification-production distinction. There may be separable cognitive and neural bases for implicit modulation of identification and production forms of knowledge.
Psychology and Aging | 2004
Debra A. Fleischman; Robert S. Wilson; John D. E. Gabrieli; Julia L. Bienias; David A. Bennett
Decline in explicit memory with advancing age is a common finding, but it is unclear whether implicit memory (repetition priming) declines or remains stable. Meta-analyses of studies that examined differences between extreme groups (young-old), typically at a single point in time and on a single test, suggest that a mild reduction in priming occurs with advancing age. The authors examined explicit memory and priming, on multiple tests over 4 annual data-collection waves, in a large group of older persons without dementia at baseline. Explicit memory declined significantly, but priming remained stable. Findings indicate that explicit memory and priming are dissociable on the basis of age-related change and that mildly reduced priming is not an inevitable consequence of growing older.
Neuropsychology (journal) | 1998
Chandan J. Vaidya; John D. E. Gabrieli; Mieke Verfaellie; Debra A. Fleischman; Nusha Askari
Font-specificity in visual word-stem completion priming was examined in patients with global amnesia and Patient M.S., who had a right-occipital lobectomy. Word-stems appeared in the same or different font as study words. Amnesic patients showed normal font-specific priming (greater priming for words studied in the same than different font as test), despite impaired word-stem cued recall. Patient M.S. failed to exhibit font-specific priming, despite preserved declarative memory. Therefore, perceptual specificity in visual priming depends on visual processes mediated by the right-occipital lobe rather than medial temporal and diencephalic regions involved in declarative memory.
Neuropsychology (journal) | 1999
Debra A. Fleischman; John D. E. Gabrieli; David W. Gilley; Joanna D. Hauser; Kelly L. Lange; Lisa M. Dwornik; David A. Bennett; Robert S. Wilson
There are many conflicting results concerning the effects of age and Alzheimers disease (AD) on word-stem completion priming. To examine potential sources of this variability, the authors examined the influences on such priming of age, cognitive status, and encoding in a large sample of young, old, and AD individuals. At study, words were processed aloud by reading, reading and rating likeability, or generating from definition. Old participants had less priming than young participants and more priming than AD patients. For the healthy old participants, priming decreased with advancing age and with cognitive loss following generation only. For AD patients, priming decreased as dementia severity increased; patients with the mildest dementia did not differ from healthy old participants. Thus, age, cognitive status, and encoding differentially influenced the magnitude of priming in healthy aging and AD.
Journal of The International Neuropsychological Society | 1998
Debra A. Fleischman; John D. E. Gabrieli; Sheryl L. Reminger; Chandan J. Vaidya; David A. Bennett
Priming for line drawings of real and nonreal objects was examined in an object decision task for 16 patients with Alzheimers disease (AD) and 16 normal elderly control (NC) participants. In two study phases, participants decided if objects were real or nonreal. In an implicit test phase, real/nonreal decisions were made for studied and unstudied objects, and priming was measured as the difference in decision speed or accuracy between studied and unstudied objects. In an explicit test phase, yes/no recognition was measured for real and nonreal objects. AD patients had impaired explicit memory for real and nonreal objects and intact repetition priming for real objects. By the latency measure, both AD and NC groups showed priming for nonreal objects but in opposite ways. Classification decisions about studied relative to nonstudied nonreal objects were slower for the AD patients, whereas such decisions were faster for the NC participants. Classification decisions of both groups were less accurate for repeated nonreal objects. These results support the claim that AD patients with mild cognitive impairment show normal perceptual priming. The AD inhibition for studied nonreal objects is discussed in terms of the decision conflict that occurs when recollection of source is not available to counter the influence of familiarity.