7 results on '"Narme P"'
Search Results
2. Repérage de la maladie d’Alzheimer dans les populations diverses : intérêt d’un rappel à 20min au test de mémoire du TNI-93
- Author
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Palisson, Juliette, Garcin, Béatrice, Benrahmoune, Kenza, Morzyglod, Sara, Joly, Charlotte, Mazoyer, Julie, Maillet, Didier, Belin, Catherine, and Narme, Pauline
- Abstract
Le TNI-93 est un test de repérage des troubles neurocognitifs majeurs dans une population multiculturelle/de faible niveau socio-éducatif [1], ayant une pertinence dans le diagnostic de patients avec biomarqueurs amyloïdes positifs [2].
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Happy facial emotional congruence in patients with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis.
- Author
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Gury P, Moulin M, Laroye R, Trachino M, Montazel M, Narme P, and Ehrlé N
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Adult, Middle Aged, Happiness, Photic Stimulation methods, Neuropsychological Tests, Multiple Sclerosis, Relapsing-Remitting physiopathology, Multiple Sclerosis, Relapsing-Remitting psychology, Facial Expression, Emotions physiology
- Abstract
Background: Emotion categorization has often been studied in the relapsing-remitting form of multiple sclerosis (RR-MS), suggesting an impairment in the recognition of emotions. The production of facial emotional expressions in RR-MS has not been considered, despite their importance in non-verbal communication., Method: Twenty-five RR-MS patients and twenty-five matched controls completed a task of emotional categorization during which their faces were filmed. The stimuli were dynamic (sound or visual), expressed by adults (women or men), and expressing happy (laughing or smiling) or negative emotion. Two independent blinded raters quantified the happy facial expressions produced. The categorization task was used as a proxy for emotional categorization, while the happy facial expressions produced assessed the production of emotions., Results: The main analysis indicated impaired categorization of RR-MS for happy stimuli selectively, whereas their happy facial expressions were not statistically different from those of the control group. More specifically, this group effect was found for smiles (and not laughter) and for happy stimuli produced by men. Analysis of individual patient profiles suggested that 77% of patients with impaired judgments produced normal facial expressions, suggesting a high prevalence of this dissociation. Only 8% of our samples showed reverse dissociation, with happy facial expressions significantly different from those of the control group and normal emotional judgments., Conclusion: These results corroborated the high prevalence of emotional categorization impairment in RR-MS but not for negative stimuli, which can probably be explained by the methodological specificities of the present work. The unusual impairment found for happy stimuli (for both emotional categorization and facial congruence) may be linked to the intensity of the perceived happy expressions but not to the emotional valence. Our results also indicated a mainly preserved production of facial emotions, which may be used in the future sociocognitive care of RR-MS patients with impaired emotional judgments.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Multidimensional assessment of social cognition using non-immersive virtual reality in dementia with Lewy bodies and Alzheimer's disease: an exploratory study.
- Author
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Msika EF, Verny M, Dieudonné B, Ehrlé N, Gaston-Bellegarde A, Orriols E, Piolino P, and Narme P
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- Humans, Male, Female, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Empathy physiology, Middle Aged, Lewy Body Disease physiopathology, Alzheimer Disease, Social Cognition, Virtual Reality, Neuropsychological Tests, Theory of Mind physiology
- Abstract
Introduction: Few studies have focused on social cognition in dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB), even though some brain structures being well known as underlying social cognitive processes are directly impacted in this disease. Furthermore, social cognition processes have been mostly studied independently using evaluations with poor ecological validity. We aimed at studying the ability of a new naturalistic and multidimensional social cognition task to reveal impairments in DLB patients. We chose to compare the profile of these patients with that of Alzheimer's disease (AD) patients, for which social cognition is better preserved., Method: Fifteen patients (DLB: n = 7; AD: n = 8) and 28 healthy controls underwent the REALSoCog task. They encountered several social situations (e.g. control versus transgressions) in a non-immersive virtual city environment allowing the assessment of moral cognition, cognitive and affective theory of mind (ToM), emotional empathy and behavioral intentions., Results: The main results showed (i) a lower ability to detect transgressions in DLB patients, particularly conventional ones, whereas moral cognition seemed better preserved in AD patients; (ii) a cognitive ToM impairment in both DLB and AD patients, while affective ToM is impaired only in DLB patients; (iii) a decreased emotional empathy specifically observed in DLB patients; (iv) more inappropriate behavioral intentions, mainly in DLB patients, but also in some AD patients., Conclusions: This study suggests the feasibility and potential interest of the REALSoCog task in revealing social cognition deficits, particularly for DLB patients by showing different social patterns as compared to AD patients. These results offer interesting clinical perspectives to develop more naturalistic tasks in such populations and for clinical differential diagnosis. Limitations and future perspectives are discussed.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Dynamic and/or multimodal assessments for social cognition in neuropsychology: Results from a systematic literature review.
- Author
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Msika EF, Despres M, Piolino P, and Narme P
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- Humans, Neuropsychological Tests standards, Psychometrics standards, Neuropsychology, Theory of Mind physiology, Social Cognition
- Abstract
Objective: Despite the prevalence of socio-cognitive disturbances, and their important diagnostic/therapeutic implications, the assessment of these disturbances remains scarce. This systematic review aims to identify available social cognition tools for adult assessment that use multimodal and/or dynamic social cues, specifying their strengths and limitations (e.g. from a methodological, psychometric, ecological, and clinical perspective). Method: An electronic search was conducted in Pubmed, PsychINFO, Embase and Scopus databases for articles published up to the 3
th of January 2023 and the first 200 Google Scholar results on the same date. The PRISMA methodology was applied, 3884 studies were screened based on title and abstract and 329 full texts were screened. Articles using pseudo-dynamic methodologies (e.g. morphing), reported only subjective or self-reported measures, or investigated only physiological or brain activity responses were excluded. Results: In total, 149 works were included in this review, representing 65 assessment tools (i.e. 48% studying emotion recognition ( n = 31), 32% Theory of Mind ( n = 21), 5% empathy ( n = 3), 1.5% moral cognition/social reasoning ( n = 1), and 14% being multimodal ( n = 9)). For each study, the tool's main characteristics, psychometric properties, ecological validity indicators and available norms are reported. The tools are presented according to social-cognitive process assessed and communication channels used. Conclusions: This study highlights the lack of validated and standardized tools. A few tools appear to partially meet some clinical needs. The development of methodologies using a first-person paradigm and taking into account the multidimensional nature of social cognition seems a relevant research endeavour for greater ecological validity.- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Facial emotional congruence in healthy adults and patients suffering from a psychiatric or neurological disorder.
- Author
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Gury P, Narme P, Tommasi A, and Ehrlé N
- Subjects
- Adult, Humans, Emotions physiology, Anger physiology, Happiness, Facial Expression, Mirror Neurons, Nervous System Diseases
- Abstract
The production of facial emotions is an important conveyor of social communication. The present review of the literature concerns the congruence of facial emotions, that is the facial muscular activation that takes place in response to the emotional facial expression perceived in others. Although scientific interest in facial emotions has increased exponentially in the last few years, the production of facial emotions is still underexplored as compared to emotional perception. Several studies, mainly conducted with electromyography, have shown that facial emotional congruence exists in a robust way, largely for anger and happiness. While facial emotional congruence was long considered as innate and automatic, recent work has demonstrated that several sociocultural factors may influence or reduce this ability, challenging its automaticity. From a neuroanatomical point of view, studies have clearly highlighted the implication of mirror neurons but our knowledge is still limited because of the few methodologies assessing this system and the lack of homogeneity between the protocols used. Many explanatory, and probably not mutually exclusive, theories of emotional facial congruence have been put forward. In experimental neuropsychology, emotional facial congruence has seldom been investigated but the few available results suggest an impairment in psychiatric and neurological patients. In view of the important role of emotional facial productions in human relations and social interactions, new methods for easy clinical assessment need to be designed for the diagnosis and the cognitive care of these abilities. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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7. Explicit and implicit abilities in humor processing in patients with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis.
- Author
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Gury P, Moulin M, Laroye R, Montazel M, Trachino M, Narme P, and Ehrlé N
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Male, Adult, Comprehension physiology, Middle Aged, Judgment physiology, Neuropsychological Tests, Multiple Sclerosis, Relapsing-Remitting psychology, Multiple Sclerosis, Relapsing-Remitting physiopathology, Wit and Humor as Topic psychology, Facial Expression
- Abstract
Sociocognitive impairment is well known in the relapsing-remitting form of multiple sclerosis (RR-MS). The purpose of the present study was to assess explicit and implicit humor abilities in this population. Based on clinical observation and contrary to the current cognitive model, we hypothesized that implicit performances (happy facial expressions) would be better than explicit ones (humor judgment assessed by explicit humor comprehension, subjective feeling of amusement as a conscious appreciation of funniness, and verbal justifications of funniness). Twenty-five RR-MS patients and twenty-five healthy participants completed the tasks. Their face was filmed during humor ratings. Patients' results suggest that 32% of them showed an impairment in explicit humor comprehension, with normal facial expressions. Both groups found great difficulty in justifying the cause of their amusement. All these results may suggest the existence of a supplementary implicit pathway in humor processing. The preservation of this implicit pathway may be advantageous for future remediation. Contrary to the current model, we found that the subjective feeling of amusement was preserved when comprehension was impaired. Further studies will be needed to clarify this component, and adjust the theoretical modeling.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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