Design of novel screening environments for Mild Cognitive Impairment: giving priority to elicited speech and language abilities

Authors

  • Sofia Segkouli CERTH/ITI
  • Ioannis Paliokas CERTH/ITI
  • Dimitrios Tzovaras CERTH/ITI
  • Dimitrios Giakoumis CERTH/ITI
  • Charalampos Karagiannidis CERTH/ITI

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.4108/icst.pervasivehealth.2015.258945

Keywords:

mild cognitive impairment, screening batteries, linguistic test, verbal fluency

Abstract

Recent cognitive decline screening batteries have highlighted the importance of language deficits related to semantic knowledge breakdown to reveal the incipient dementia. This paper proposes the introduction of novel enriched linguistic tests and examines the hypothesis that language can be a sensitive cognitive measure for Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI). A group of MCI and healthy elderly were administered a set of proposed linguistic tests. Performance measures were made on both groups to indicate that concrete verbal production deficits such as impaired verb fluency can distinguish the MCI from normal aging. In addition, it was found that even in cases where the MCI subjects preserved scores, language tests took significantly more time compared to healthy controls. These findings indicate that language could be a sensitive cognitive marker in preclinical stages of MCI.

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Published

03-08-2015

How to Cite

[1]
S. Segkouli, I. Paliokas, D. Tzovaras, D. Giakoumis, and C. Karagiannidis, “Design of novel screening environments for Mild Cognitive Impairment: giving priority to elicited speech and language abilities”, EAI Endorsed Trans Cloud Sys, vol. 1, no. 4, p. e3, Aug. 2015.