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Use of processing speed measures to assess cognitive impairment. Preliminary study
(Annual Meeting of the International Neuropsychological Society (39è : 2011 : Boston), 2011)
Pòster presentat al 39è Annual Meeting of the International Neuropsychological Society – Boston (Massachusetts) – 2011
Assessment of Processing Speed and Executive Functions performance when discriminating between MCI, AD and VaD
(International Congress on Vascular Dementia (6è : 2009 : Barcelona), 2009)
Actually there exists an increasing demand in relation to the neuropsychological explorations in the beginning stages of cognitive impairment due to the highest sensitization of general population to ...
Assessment of Processing Speed and Executive Functions performance when discriminating between Mild Cognitive Impairment and Dementia States
(INS Mid-Year Meeting (2009 : Helsinki-Tallin), 2009)
The progressive ageing of population, especially relevant in the last years, will keep going on and the number of elderly will become very considerable in the next decades. This situation makes necessary ...
Going Beyond Early Assessment of MCI: the meaningfulness of cognitive procesing speed
(International Conference on Alzheimer's and Parkinson's Disease (11ena : 2013 : Florència), 2013)
The aim of this communication is introducing the importance of the inclusion of cognitive processing speed (CPS) in
neuropsychological assessments for MCI & AD as the slowdown of CPS is present in ...
Neuropsychology and Aging in Down Syndrome
(IASSID-Europe Conference: Integrating Biomedical and Psycho-Social-Educational Perspectives (3r : 2010 : Roma), 2010)
The increase of life expectancy in subjects with Down syndrome (SD) arises many questions about the aging process, giving the early onset and the hight probability of developing cognitive impairment. ...
Clinical and social factors related to burden on relatives of patients with dementia
(Annual Meeting of the International Neuropsychological Society (36è : 2008 Waikoloa - Hawaiï), 2008)
This study pretended to detect the needs that relatives of patients with dementia have and also to know how they
conciliate their work with their familiar everyday life in order to articulate interventions ...