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Bruce L. Miller
Researcher at University of California, San Francisco
Publications - 1296
Citations - 135366
Bruce L. Miller is an academic researcher from University of California, San Francisco. The author has contributed to research in topics: Frontotemporal dementia & Dementia. The author has an hindex of 163, co-authored 1153 publications receiving 115975 citations. Previous affiliations of Bruce L. Miller include University of Southern California & National Institutes of Health.
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Changes in painting styles of two artists with Alzheimer's disease.
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that quantitative methods can be applied to the neuropsychology of art production and to determine whether there are systematic changes in the art produced by two individuals with Alzheimer's disease.
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Using care navigation to address caregiver burden in dementia: A qualitative case study analysis
Alissa Bernstein,Jennifer Merrilees,Sarah Dulaney,Krista L. Harrison,Winston Chiong,Paulina Ong,Julia Heunis,Jeff Choi,Reilly Walker,Julie E. Feuer,Kirby Lee,Daniel Dohan,Stephen J. Bonasera,Bruce L. Miller,Katherine L. Possin +14 more
TL;DR: Phone‐ and web‐based care navigation is an innovative model of care that may be useful in addressing caregiver burden in dementia.
Journal Article
Rey-Osterrieth Complex Figure performance in healthy, older adults
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Clinical and imaging characteristics of late onset mitochondrial membrane protein-associated neurodegeneration (MPAN)
Ethan Gore,Brian S. Appleby,Mark L. Cohen,Suzanne D. DeBrosse,James B. Leverenz,Bruce L. Miller,Sandra L. Siedlak,Xiongwei Zhu,Alan J. Lerner +8 more
TL;DR: A 35-year-old Kuwaiti man with social withdrawal, drowsiness, irritability, anxiety, aphasia, memory loss, hypereflexia, and Parkinsonism is presented, the oldest onset age of MPAN reported.
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‘The quicksand of forgetfulness’: semantic dementia in One Hundred Years of Solitude
TL;DR: This multidisciplinary article compares the pattern of memory loss described in Gabriel García Márquez's One Hundred Years of Solitude to that exhibited by patients with semantic dementia (SD), creating a striking literary depiction of collective semantic dementia before the syndrome was recognized in neurology.