D
David Neary
Researcher at Salford Royal NHS Foundation Trust
Publications - 220
Citations - 33304
David Neary is an academic researcher from Salford Royal NHS Foundation Trust. The author has contributed to research in topics: Frontotemporal dementia & Dementia. The author has an hindex of 78, co-authored 206 publications receiving 31481 citations. Previous affiliations of David Neary include University of Salford & Manchester Academic Health Science Centre.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Classification and pathology of primary progressive aphasia
Jennifer M. Harris,Claire Gall,Jennifer C. Thompson,Anna Richardson,David Neary,Daniel du Plessis,Piyali Pal,David M. A. Mann,Julie S. Snowden,Matthew Jones +9 more
TL;DR: The 2011 PPA recommendations classify a large proportion of patients who meet basic PPA criteria, however, some patients had aphasic syndromes that could not be classified, suggesting that the 2011 recommendations do not cover the full range of PPA variants.
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Psychomotor, Executive, and Memory Function in Preclinical Huntington's Disease
TL;DR: It is suggested that HD patients' functional deficits do not evolve uniformly, and performance on psychomotor tasks in people with the mutation who were close to clinical onset of HD was intermediate between that of individuals many years from onset and those in the early stages of HD, suggesting a slowly insidious evolution of deficit.
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The progression of the pathological changes of alzheimer's disease in frontal and temporal neocortex examined both at biopsy and at autopsy
TL;DR: The progression of the pathological changes of Alzheimer's disease in frontal and temporal neocortex examined both at biopsy and at autopsy.
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Emotion recognition in Huntington's disease and frontotemporal dementia.
TL;DR: The most severe deficits in HD were elicited for anger, a finding that may have relevance for the poor anger control that is the hallmark of HD, and the possibility that linguistic influences and conceptual complexities of the emotion of disgust may contribute to the variable finding of selective disgust impairment in HD.
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Behavior in Huntington's disease: dissociating cognition-based and mood-based changes.
TL;DR: The authors examine the relationship of three dimensions of behavioral change measured by the Problem Behaviors Assessment for Huntington's Disease to cognitive and motor indices of disease severity to suggest certain behavioral alterations are intrinsic to the evolution and progression of HD.