Facial perception in Alzheimer's disease : investigating the gnostic line of facial recognition
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Background. Deficits in facial recognition in people with Alzheimer's (AD) is a highly
attributed and studied aspect in relation to memory problems. Although the reality of memory
deficits in the clinic of the disease is a fact, this is not the only explanatory aspect for facial
recognition problems; This can also be explained by Gnostic Problems. Evidence literature
exists for this line but it is highly understudied.
Objective. To study whether there is a specific deficit in facial visual perception in patients
with AD, contrasting the results with a control group.
Method. A sample of 10 participants (5 clinical and 5 controls) were evaluated in a cognitive
screening test (MMSE), one of facial visuoperceptive skills (the central paradigm of the
study, the BFRT-r), and two of generic visuoperceptive skills (RBANS line orientation test
and VOSP number location test).
Results. The analyses of the data collected in the tasks showed significant differences
between groups in the facial perception test with a lower performance by the clinical group,
while not in the generic visuoperceptives.
Conclusions. The study suggests significant evidence on the deficit in facial perception on
the part of Alzheimer's patients in the sample compared to the control group.
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