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Christine Moroni

Researcher at university of lille

Publications -  62
Citations -  723

Christine Moroni is an academic researcher from university of lille. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cognition & Neuropsychology. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 55 publications receiving 582 citations. Previous affiliations of Christine Moroni include Lille University of Science and Technology.

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Victoria Stroop Test: Normative Data in a Sample Group of Older People and the Study of Their Clinical Applications in the Assessment of Inhibition in Alzheimer's Disease

TL;DR: Clinical evidence is provided suggesting that the VST has a clinical utility in the assessment of inhibition in AD, and the influence of demographic characteristics on VST score is examined.
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Mood and anxiety disorders in systemic sclerosis patients.

TL;DR: The current and lifetime prevalence of major depression and anxiety disorders is high in SSc patients, especially during hospitalization, however, only half of such patients receive adequate psychiatric treatment.
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Scene categorization at large visual eccentricities

TL;DR: The results show that classification of global scene properties as well as basic-level categorization were accomplished with a performance highly above chance in the far periphery even at 70° eccentricity, consistent with studies suggesting that scene gist recognition can be accomplished by the low resolution of peripheral vision.
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Prospective and retrospective time perception are related to mental time travel: evidence from Alzheimer's disease.

TL;DR: Comparisons of prospective and retrospective time estimation in younger adults, older adults, and AD patients shed light on the relationship between time perception and the ability to mentally project oneself into time, two skills contributing to human memory functioning.
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To what extent does destination recall induce episodic reliving? Evidence from Alzheimer’s disease

TL;DR: Alzheimer's disease-related destination memory decline may be attributed to the perturbation of episodic memory and its autonoetic reliving, and the potential neural bases of this decline are discussed in terms of hippocampal failures.