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1 or global cognition and 1.65 (1.04-2.61) for verbal memory.
2 e and anxiety symptoms, and visuospatial and verbal memory.
3 ion for word encoding correlated with better verbal memory.
4 rbal memory and the brain systems underlying verbal memory.
5  the impaired range on a task of unrehearsed verbal memory.
6 bal thinking, but not sustained attention or verbal memory.
7 e on all neurocognitive tests except that of verbal memory.
8 ment than comparison subjects on measures of verbal memory.
9 orming more poorly than controls on tests of verbal memory.
10 pocampal formation is necessary for auditory-verbal memory.
11 cognitively impaired in processing speed and verbal memory.
12 te effects of chronic memantine treatment on verbal memory.
13 al stimuli were administered to characterize verbal memory.
14 working memory, whereas MR was implicated in verbal memory.
15 ifferent levels: regional hypometabolism and verbal memory.
16 d this was associated with an improvement in verbal memory.
17 ding globulin was positively associated with verbal memory.
18 has been shown to be central for encoding of verbal memories.
19 e in global cognition (0.52 [0.31-0.88]) and verbal memory (0.56 [0.34-0.94]).
20 ng (1.80 points [95% CI, 0.73 to 2.86]), and verbal memory (0.60 points [95% CI, 0.13 to 1.07]).
21 obal cognition, 0.54 (95% CI, 0.10-0.98) for verbal memory, 0.51 (95% CI, 0.07-0.96) for language, an
22 nt improvements were noted for all subtests (verbal memory: 28.0% vs. 37.5%, respectively, norm 50%,
23 ted onset), decreased hippocampal volume and verbal memory (7.5 years after expected onset), and decr
24 g (95% CI: -4.6, 0.2, p = 0.08), and -1.7 on Verbal Memory (95% CI: -3.9, 0.6, p = 0.14).
25 n addition, post-depressives scored lower in verbal memory, a neuropsychological measure of hippocamp
26  with left hippocampal sclerosis with better verbal memory additionally activated left orbitofrontal
27 r ratios correlated positively with tests of verbal memory and a verbal memory factor (e.g. NAA/Cr an
28 ment, a significant postoperative decline in verbal memory and confrontational naming was observed in
29 ed initial psychosis except on two measures (verbal memory and cortical sulcal depth).
30 piciousness while also including compromised verbal memory and declining social functioning have the
31 The presence of both higher CDR-SB and lower verbal memory and executive function at baseline predict
32 rvasive but evident in performance scores on verbal memory and fluency tests.
33 ere significantly positively associated with verbal memory and global cognition in early group women.
34 ye-hand coordination, executive functioning, verbal memory and learning, and visual memory).
35 ye-hand coordination, executive functioning, verbal memory and learning, visual memory and learning,
36 ye-hand coordination, executive functioning, verbal memory and learning, visual memory, and visuocons
37 ye-hand coordination, executive functioning, verbal memory and learning, visual memory, and visuocons
38                                              Verbal memory and left hippocampal volumes were signific
39 ithin a 2-year period: 2 measures of delayed verbal memory and middle temporal lobe cortical thicknes
40 isual-spatial function, expressive language, verbal memory and modulation of affect.
41 ther equally impaired on Executive Function, Verbal Memory and Nonverbal Memory.
42  neuropsychological parameters pertaining to verbal memory and nonverbal problem solving.
43 hey characteristically also suffer from poor verbal memory and often from poor auditory skills.
44  APOE-4 allele had lower scores on objective verbal memory and on the subjective memory measure for r
45 red with placebo is associated with improved verbal memory and other cognitive functions in older men
46                             In contrast, for verbal memory and phonology, the data may suggest that d
47  correlated with performance on language and verbal memory and positively with visuospatial ability.
48                                  Deficits in verbal memory and psychomotor speed/executive function a
49 re negatively correlated with performance in verbal memory and several executive function measures.
50 eased spindles produced significantly better verbal memory and significantly worse perceptual learnin
51 e mania is characterized by core deficits in verbal memory and sustained attention against a backgrou
52                                              Verbal memory and sustained attention deficits may relat
53 use of HT might confer long-term benefits to verbal memory and the brain systems underlying verbal me
54 postmenopausal stage might confer benefit to verbal memory and the neural systems underlying memory,
55 d negatively and significantly with tests of verbal memory and the Verbal Memory Factor.
56                                              Verbal memory and vigilance appear to be necessary for a
57 ver 5.4 y with 5 tests of general cognition, verbal memory, and category fluency.
58 score averaging 5 tests of global cognition, verbal memory, and category fluency.
59 mal male subjects and on tests of attention, verbal memory, and executive functions in comparison wit
60 k 24 on measures of attention/concentration, verbal memory, and figural memory and a trend for verbal
61 ionships of childhood deficits in attention, verbal memory, and gross motor skills to adulthood schiz
62 iations with each WRAML index-Visual Memory, Verbal Memory, and Learning-were examined with multivari
63 ths in verbal intelligence, verbal learning, verbal memory, and reading, and significant weaknesses i
64 ition (averaging tests of general cognition, verbal memory, and semantic fluency) and verbal memory (
65 measures of attention, short-term visual and verbal memory, and spatial reasoning within the context
66 sts of intellect (intelligent quotient; IQ), verbal memory, and sustained attention.
67 al fluency, motor functions, working memory, verbal memory, and vigilance, improved significantly wit
68 n, language, motor function, spatial memory, verbal memory, and visual processing.
69 ical tests of attention, executive function, verbal memory, and visuospatial skills were administered
70 carotid amobarbital testing and non-invasive verbal memory assessment before surgery, and correlated
71                              However, better verbal memory at follow-up was linked to greater post-su
72                                     Impaired verbal memory, attention, and some executive functions m
73 ficantly worse than the controls in tests of verbal memory, attention, verbal fluency and spatial rea
74 on, verbal memory, and semantic fluency) and verbal memory (averaging tests of recall).
75 x responses to "new" Braille words suggested verbal memory based on the mechanism of recollection.
76 verbal (beta = -2.49; 95% CI: -4.71, -0.27), verbal memory (beta = -3.59; 95% CI: -6.95, -0.23), cogn
77    The authors examined group differences in verbal memory between men on androgen deprivation therap
78 ) of 130 patients in tests of non-verbal and verbal memory (BMIPB).
79 benefits for aspects of processing speed and verbal memory but interferes with practice effects durin
80 enic compounds can exert positive effects on verbal memory, but not in older men and women, when no o
81         We investigated neural mechanisms of verbal memory by using fMRI and a task designed to tease
82 tive Syndrome Scale) and cognitive function (verbal memory [California Verbal Learning Test, second e
83 sition was predicted by group membership and verbal memory capacity and not by symptoms.
84 2003), including tests of general cognition, verbal memory, category fluency, and attention.
85 cognitive tests measuring general cognition, verbal memory, category fluency, and working memory.
86  0.12 to 1.15]), but not in new learning and verbal memory, compared with prestroke slopes.
87 ermore, performance changes in attention and verbal memory correlated with mean regional FA changes i
88 five domains-attention, response inhibition, verbal memory, decision speed, and information processin
89 ion on word encoding correlated with greater verbal memory decline after left anterior temporal lobe
90 terial specific memory impairment, typically verbal memory decline following left and visual memory d
91 gical tests predicted clinically significant verbal memory decline in all patients who underwent left
92 ed data for the prediction of post-operative verbal memory decline in such patients with a novel fMRI
93 n cure seizures, but may produce significant verbal memory decline, which is hard to predict.
94 .7 points, 95% CI 3.6-7.8; p<0.0001) and non-verbal memory (decline of 6.8 points, 4.8-8.7; p<0.0001)
95 gher disease severity correlated with larger verbal memory deficits (RAVLT delayed recall, r = -0.40;
96 ngs suggest that smaller left hippocampi and verbal memory deficits are an expression of early neurod
97                                              Verbal memory deficits can be ameliorated by memory exer
98                                              Verbal memory deficits have been reported in many studie
99  predates symptoms by several years and that verbal memory deficits precede more widespread deteriora
100  disorganized communication, suspiciousness, verbal memory deficits, and decline in social functionin
101 phrenia includes smaller left hippocampi and verbal memory deficits.
102 gnition, r = -0.41; P = .04) correlated with verbal memory deficits.
103  the cingulum was negatively associated with verbal memory delayed recall (left: beta = -0.52, p = 0.
104 campal volume was positively associated with verbal memory delayed recall (left: beta = 0.44, p = 0.0
105 ith schizophrenia has a selective deficit in verbal memory despite normal motivation, attention, and
106 tate Examination (MMSE), word list learning (verbal memory), digit span (attention), clock drawing an
107 a impaired cognitive performance in tests of verbal memory, digit symbol coding, digit span backwards
108  of treating brain and behavioral aspects of verbal memory dysfunction in patients with schizophrenia
109 speed (Symbol Digit Modalities Test (SDMT)), verbal memory (East Boston Memory Test), and working mem
110        Control subjects displayed subsequent verbal memory effects within left parahippocampal gyrus,
111                                   During the verbal memory encoding task the comparison subjects, but
112 uch patients with a novel fMRI assessment of verbal memory encoding.
113 Mild impairments in cognitive processing and verbal memory evident on neuropsychological testing 2 da
114  were associated with worse verbal learning, verbal memory, executive function, and psychomotor speed
115 erall performance and worse verbal learning, verbal memory, executive function, psychomotor speed, an
116 airments in the domains of processing speed, verbal memory, executive function, working memory, visuo
117 een endogenous serum levels of estradiol and verbal memory, executive functions, or global cognition.
118                     Eight patients did daily verbal memory exercises that became progressively more d
119 est for accuracy of abstraction/flexibility, verbal memory, face memory, spatial processing, and emot
120 positively with tests of verbal memory and a verbal memory factor (e.g. NAA/Cr and Logical Memory: r
121 ficantly with tests of verbal memory and the Verbal Memory Factor.
122 improvement in the MPH group on a measure of verbal memory failed to reach statistical significance.
123 d hormone-replacement therapy on measures of verbal memory, figural memory, mental rotations, attenti
124 sy but may impair memory function, typically verbal memory following left, and visual memory followin
125  and basal temporal cortex related to recent verbal memory for object names, text and auditory words.
126 ippocampus that is important for maintaining verbal memory function after anterior temporal lobe rese
127 for effective preoperative reorganization of verbal memory function to the ipsilateral posterior medi
128 schizophrenic parents, childhood deficits in verbal memory, gross motor skills, and attention identif
129 k for schizophrenia by childhood deficits in verbal memory, gross motor skills, and attention.
130 emotion identification, h(2)g=0.36, P=1e-05; verbal memory, h(2)g=0.24, P=0.005).
131 s related to greater decline among women for verbal memory, immediate recall [California Verbal Learn
132 of bone mineral density to the prevalence of verbal memory impairment among 4,304 elderly subjects in
133 d other covariates, the prevalence ratios of verbal memory impairment for each increased bone mineral
134                            The prevalence of verbal memory impairment for each increasing bone minera
135                     The authors suggest that verbal memory impairment in schizophrenia is a consequen
136  whom neuropsychometric data were available, verbal memory impairment preceded visual memory deficits
137                            The prevalence of verbal memory impairment was 15% (4/26 patients); none d
138                                              Verbal memory impairment was defined as a combined score
139 al density in the elderly is associated with verbal memory impairment.
140                The prevalence of significant verbal memory improvements was 12% (3/26).
141 onselective inhibitor carbenoxolone improved verbal memory in elderly men.
142 ine treatment may have beneficial effects on verbal memory in FXTAS.
143  right anterior temporal lobe resection than verbal memory in left temporal lobe epilepsy.
144 obal cognition in both sexes combined and in verbal memory in men.
145 r psychomotor speed, executive function, and verbal memory in midlife.
146 py may have a selective beneficial effect on verbal memory in older nondemented women.
147 ler subiculum volumes were related to poorer verbal memory in patients with bipolar disorder and heal
148  showing a positive influence of estrogen on verbal memory in postmenopausal women.
149                                     Impaired verbal memory in schizophrenia is a key rate-limiting fa
150 an innovative approach to the remediation of verbal memory in schizophrenia, based on principles deri
151 : early memory loss (initially selective for verbal memory in some individuals) was followed soon aft
152 h a significant decline in global cognition, verbal memory, language, and executive function, and ele
153  multiple domains (attention, visual memory, verbal memory, language, motor, and visual) in a cohort
154  which reflect performance in the domains of verbal memory, learning, visual organization and memory,
155 ssociated with estrogen depletion, including verbal memory loss in humans, may therefore stem from co
156 and placebo groups on the secondary outcome, verbal memory (mean difference in cognitive change over
157 mprovements on the WAIS-III digit symbol and verbal memory measures.
158 intelligence, executive function, attention, verbal memory, motor skills, and visual-spatial percepti
159 in attention, working memory, visual memory, verbal memory, new learning, and executive function in r
160  of different cognitive abilities were used: Verbal Memory, Nonverbal Memory and Executive Function.
161 psychological measures of speeded attention, verbal memory or visuospatial functions, nor were signif
162             Reduced performance on tests for verbal memory (OR, 1.74; 95% CI, 1.169-2.594; P = .006),
163 be for encoding words correlated with better verbal memory outcome after left anterior temporal lobe
164 ivation correlated with better postoperative verbal memory outcome.
165        We carried out a prospective study of verbal memory over a long-term retention interval of 8 w
166 rovement in executive function (P < .01) and verbal memory (P < .05) after chemotherapy, and follow-u
167 nly (P <.04), particularly in the domains of verbal memory (P <.01) and psychomotor functioning (P <.
168 ve tests of immediate (P = .015) and delayed verbal memory (P = .002), processing speed (P < .001), e
169 tamoxifen on Processing Speed (P = .036) and Verbal Memory (P = .05) in the no-chemotherapy group.
170 airment on logical reasoning (P = 0.012) and verbal memory (P = 0.03), and trends toward greater impa
171 l cognitive (p for linear trend < 0.001) and verbal memory (p for linear trend = 0.009) trajectories,
172 l cognitive (p for linear trend = 0.008) and verbal memory (p for linear trend = 0.01) trajectories.
173 lly affected already had significantly lower verbal memory (P=0.003) and performance IQ (P=0.030) sco
174 intracarotid amobarbital testing: P < 0.001; verbal memory: P < 0.05).
175  categorical fluency test 1.1, -0.3 to 2.6), verbal memory (paragraph recall test 0.29, -1.2 to 1.8),
176           Between time points, deteriorating verbal memory performance correlated with decreasing upp
177 ctivity did not negatively impact subsequent verbal memory performance for individuals with low anter
178 cline group demonstrated significantly lower verbal memory performance including immediate recall (F
179 y volunteers, Met allele carriers had poorer verbal memory performance than their Val-homozygous coun
180  both before and after lung transplantation, verbal memory performance was slightly better posttransp
181 sed theta amplitude was associated with poor verbal memory performance.
182 w DHub values accurately predicted declining verbal memory performance.
183 ral lobe correlated with worse postoperative verbal memory performance.
184 mine concentrations correlated with impaired verbal memory performance.
185 sychosis beyond clinical criteria, but worse verbal memory predicted more rapid conversion.
186 ssociated with greater decline among men for verbal memory (prediction II).
187            Left-sided lesions interfere with verbal memory processes, whereas right-sided lesions int
188 hysiological marker of semantic priming, and verbal memory processes.
189 ded lesions interfere with visuospatial (non-verbal) memory processes.
190 emained associated with overall performance, verbal memory, psychomotor speed, and fine motor skills,
191 mpus MAO-A VT was negatively correlated with verbal memory (r = -.44, p = .023).
192 sponses of cognitive control networks during verbal memory recall are partly responsible for reduced
193 up had significant improvements in immediate verbal memory recall over time.
194 hology would impair activity associated with verbal memory recall; and that central cholinesterase in
195  and mesial temporal lobe systems supporting verbal memory, regardless of ADHD comorbidity.
196 ombined raloxifene group on the two tests of verbal memory (relative risk, 0.77) and attention, (rela
197 rformance (as measured by a clinical test of verbal memory retention).
198 Indeed, previous studies have suggested that verbal memory retrieval leads to the reinstatement of ac
199        Each participant underwent testing of verbal memory (Rey Auditory-Verbal Learning Test), visua
200                The secondary end point was a verbal memory score combining 4 tests of verbal memory,
201                                              Verbal memory scores at the time of imaging were lower,
202 composite measures of executive function and verbal memory scores were generally within normal limits
203 formed significantly more poorly than men in verbal memory, spatial memory, and visual processing.
204 , we noted significant worsening on tests of verbal memory (T score decline of 5.7 points, 95% CI 3.6
205 erformed better than nonusers on the imaging verbal memory task (p<.05).
206 itron emission tomography using a continuous verbal memory task during the period of tracer uptake.
207 ng speed, and selective attention deficit in verbal memory task performance in schizophrenia.
208 ance and regional brain activations during a verbal memory task were assessed before and after these
209 ctivity were acquired in the test phase of a verbal memory task where healthy human volunteers made R
210 oring performed a paired-associates episodic verbal memory task.
211 e same brain region that is activated during verbal memory tasks in healthy individuals.
212 a higher rate of errors of commission on the verbal memory test (incorrectly identified distracters a
213 inical Dementia Rating Scale sum of boxes, a verbal memory test (logical memory), and a controlled or
214 udy examined differences in performance on a verbal memory test and in cortisol levels between patien
215  harshly and performed worse on an objective verbal memory test than did epsilon4+ adults who did not
216 nning, which correlated with memory decline (verbal memory test, unstandardized beta = -0.79, P < 0.0
217 h FMS showed normal cognitive functioning on verbal memory tests free of distraction.
218 iated with improved performance in motor and verbal memory tests.
219                Patients had worse visual and verbal memory than controls.
220 ey Auditory Verbal Learning Test (RAVLT) for verbal memory, the Digit Symbol Substitution Test (DSST)
221                                           On verbal memory, there was a significant genotype effect b
222 s associated with worse global cognitive and verbal memory trajectories, whereas higher MUFA intake w
223  novel visual episodic information, auditory verbal memory using a novel/familiar paradigm has not ye
224 7 Test, Digit Symbol Substitution Test), and Verbal Memory (Verbal Paired Associates, Logical Memory,
225 mptomatic from menopause had improvements in verbal memory, vigilance, reasoning, and motor speed, bu
226 essing, attention/vigilance, working memory, verbal memory, visual memory, and reasoning/problem solv
227 ion processing, motor speed, verbal ability, verbal memory, visual memory, and visuospatial ability.
228 n that yielded measures of global cognition, verbal memory, visual memory, attention, language, execu
229 tention, executive function, working memory, verbal memory, visual memory, visuospatial perception, a
230 so included measures of sustained attention, verbal memory, visual-motor integration, and fine motor
231 ent cognitive impairments in working memory, verbal memory, visuospatial memory and attention signifi
232 neuropsychological factors were constructed: verbal memory (VM), visual memory (VsM), verbal learning
233                                              Verbal memory was assessed using delayed recall of a thr
234         The most consistent finding was that verbal memory was associated with all types of functiona
235                                              Verbal memory was evaluated at baseline and 24m with the
236                     Performance on a test of verbal memory was independently and strongly related to
237                                              Verbal memory was unchanged over the course of the study
238              We found that visual memory and verbal memory were better predicted by FC, whereas visua
239                    Executive functioning and verbal memory were between the low-average and borderlin
240 s a verbal memory score combining 4 tests of verbal memory, which is a strong predictor of Alzheimer
241  few years of illness, with the exception of verbal memory, which shows significantly less improvemen
242 age and sex corrected) with T1-weighted MRI, verbal memory with the ten-item Consortium to Establish
243 er Disease Word-List Learning; range, 0-30), verbal memory (Word-List Delayed Recall; range, 0-10), a
244 uospatial navigation, cognitive flexibility, verbal memory, working memory, decision speed, informati
245 -affected participants with poor declarative verbal memory would have pronounced abnormalities in the
246 er than the norm on short-term and long-term verbal memory (z score = -1.40 [1.58], p = 0.016; z scor

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