Marco Monaco
University of Rome Tor Vergata
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Publication
Featured researches published by Marco Monaco.
PLOS ONE | 2014
Alberto Costa; Marco Monaco; Silvia Zabberoni; Antonella Peppe; Roberta Perri; Lucia Fadda; Francesca Iannarelli; Carlo Caltagirone; Giovanni Augusto Carlesimo
The hypothesis has been advanced that memory disorders in individuals with Parkinson’s disease (PD) are related to either retrieval or consolidation failure. However, the characteristics of the memory impairments of PD patients with amnestic mild cognitive impairment have not been clarified. This study was aimed at investigating whether memory deficits in PD patients with amnestic mild cognitive impairment (PDaMCI) are due to failure of retrieval or consolidation processes. Sixteen individuals with PDaMCI, 20 with amnestic mild cognitive impairment without PD (aMCINPD), and 20 healthy controls were recruited. Participants were administered the Free and Cued Selective Reminding Test. An index of cueing was computed for each subject to capture the advantage in retrieval of cued compared to free recall. Individuals with PDaMCI performed worse than healthy controls on the free recall (p<0.01) but not the cued recall (p>0.10) task, and they performed better than aMCINPD subjects on both recall measures (p<0.01). The index of cueing of subjects with PD was comparable to that of healthy controls (p>0.10) but it was significantly higher than that of the aMCINPD sample (p<0.01). Moreover, PD patients’ performance on free recall trials was significantly predicted by scores on a test investigating executive functions (i.e., the Modified Card Sorting Test; p = 0.042). Findings of the study document that, in subjects with amnestic mild cognitive impairment associated to PD, episodic memory impairment is related to retrieval rather than to consolidation failure. The same data suggest that, in these individuals, memory deficits might be due to altered frontal-related executive functioning.
Journal of Neurology | 2015
Roberta Perri; Marco Monaco; Lucia Fadda; Laura Serra; Camillo Marra; Carlo Caltagirone; Amalia C. Bruni; Sabrina A.M. Curcio; Marco Bozzali; Giovanni Augusto Carlesimo
Memory tests able to differentiate encoding and retrieval processes from the memoranda storing ones should be used to differentiate patients in a very early phase of AD. In fact, individuals with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) can be characterized by two different memory profiles: a pure amnestic one (with poor learning and retrieval and poor improvement when encoding is assisted and retrieval is facilitated) and a dysexecutive one (with inefficient encoding and/or poor retrieval strategies and improvement with assisted encoding and retrieval). The amnestic profile characterizes subjects affected by medio-temporal atrophy typical of AD. In this study, a Grober–Buschke memory procedure was used to evaluate normal controls and MCI patients with different cognitive profiles: pure amnestic (aMCIsd), amnestic plus other cognitive impairments (aMCImd) and non-amnestic (naMCI). An index of sensitivity of cueing (ISC) measured the advantage passing from free to cued recall. Results showed that both strategic and consolidation abilities were impaired in the aMCIsd and aMCImd groups and were preserved in the naMCI group. aMCImd, however, compensated the memory deficit with assisted encoding and retrieval, but aMCIsd performed very poorly. When MCI subjects were defined according to the ISC value, subjects with poor ISC were primarily in the aMCIsd group and, to a lesser extent, in the aMCImd group and the naMCI group. Finally, patients with a poor ISC showed cerebral atrophy documented in the precocious phase of AD and the retrosplenial cerebral areas seemed to be the most useful areas for identifying patients in the early phase of AD.
Journal of Neuropsychology | 2018
Roberta Perri; Giovanni Augusto Carlesimo; Marco Monaco; Carlo Caltagirone; Gian Daniele Zannino
Experiments with semantic priming (SP) paradigms have documented early hypopriming in patients with AD when concepts are used as primes and attribute concept features as targets, suggesting that concept attributes are vulnerable to damage very early in the disease course. The aims of this study were to confirm early priming reduction in the attribute condition in patients with AD and to determine which of several semantic indexes (such as the level of distinctiveness, correlation or feature dominance of concept features) best predicts the priming effect size in AD. We administered an SP attribute condition paradigm to 20 mildly demented patients with AD and to 10 NCs. We used concept-attribute pairs for which normative data of semantic indexes relative to both concept primes (i.e., number, type, mean level of dominance, distinctiveness and correlation of features constituting the concepts) and target features (i.e., level of feature dominance, correlation and distinctiveness) were available. Results showed that compared to NCs, the AD group obtained very reduced priming facilitation. Furthermore, the item regression analyses showed that the priming decrement in the AD group was predicted by the feature dominance of the target in the related pairs; that is, the lower the target feature dominance, the lower the priming effect elicited. These results confirmed hypopriming in the attribute condition from the very early phase of AD and support the view that attributes which are more salient for the identification of a given concept are also those most resistant to semantic memory degradation in AD pathology.
Neurological Sciences | 2013
Marco Monaco; Alberto Costa; Carlo Caltagirone; Giovanni Augusto Carlesimo
Neurological Sciences | 2014
Alberto Costa; Eriola Bagoj; Marco Monaco; Silvia Zabberoni; Salvatore De Rosa; Anna Maria Papantonio; Ciro Mundi; Carlo Caltagirone; Giovanni Augusto Carlesimo
Neurological Sciences | 2015
Marco Monaco; Alberto Costa; Carlo Caltagirone; Giovanni Augusto Carlesimo
Brain and Language | 2014
Gian Daniele Zannino; Roberta Perri; Marco Monaco; Carlo Caltagirone; Simona Luzzi; Giovanni Augusto Carlesimo
Neurological Sciences | 2013
Giovanni Augusto Carlesimo; Marco De Risi; Marco Monaco; Alberto Costa; Lucia Fadda; Angelo Picardi; Giancarlo Di Gennaro; Carlo Caltagirone; Liliana G. Grammaldo
Neurological Sciences | 2013
Alberto Costa; Eriola Bagoj; Marco Monaco; Silvia Zabberoni; Salvatore De Rosa; Ciro Mundi; Carlo Caltagirone; Giovanni Augusto Carlesimo
FOCUS | 2016
Roberta Perri; Marco Monaco; Lucia Fadda; Carlo Caltagirone; Giovanni Augusto Carlesimo