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M

M. James

Researcher at University of Cambridge

Publications -  8
Citations -  3178

M. James is an academic researcher from University of Cambridge. The author has contributed to research in topics: Frontal lobe & Spatial memory. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 8 publications receiving 3030 citations.

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Cambridge Neuropsychological Test Automated Battery (CANTAB): a factor analytic study of a large sample of normal elderly volunteers.

TL;DR: The CANTAB battery, which is based on tests used to identify the neural substrates of learning and memory in non-human primates, has now been extensively used in the assessment of various forms of dementia and also validated on patients with neurosurgical lesions of the frontal and temporal lobes.
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Fronto-striatal cognitive deficits at different stages of parkinson's disease

TL;DR: Groups of patients with idiopathic Parkinson's disease, either medicated or unmedicated, were compared with matched groups of normal controls on a computerized battery previously shown to be sensitive to frontal lobe dysfunction, including tests of planning, spatial working memory and attentional set-shifting.
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L-dopa withdrawal in Parkinson's disease selectively impairs cognitive performance in tests sensitive to frontal lobe dysfunction

TL;DR: The results are discussed in terms of the fronto-striatal, dopamine dependent nature of some of the cognitive deficits found in PD, but the apparent dopamine-independent nature of deficits in other aspects of cognitive functioning, notably in tests of visual recognition memory and associative learning.
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Cognitive deficits in progressive supranuclear palsy, Parkinson's disease, and multiple system atrophy in tests sensitive to frontal lobe dysfunction.

TL;DR: These basal ganglia disorders share a distinctive pattern of cognitive deficits on tests of frontal lobe dysfunction, but there are differences in the exact nature of the impairments, in comparison not only with frontal lobe damage but also with one another.
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Visuospatial Memory Deficits at Different Stages of Parkinson's Disease

TL;DR: There are multiple memory impairments in PD which may differentially depend on the clinical severity of the disease, and significant impairments were found in both groups of medicated PD patients and particularly in those patients with more severe clinical symptoms.