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Rose Bruffaerts

Researcher at Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

Publications -  62
Citations -  1060

Rose Bruffaerts is an academic researcher from Katholieke Universiteit Leuven. The author has contributed to research in topics: Frontotemporal dementia & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 44 publications receiving 608 citations. Previous affiliations of Rose Bruffaerts include Allen Institute for Brain Science & University of Cambridge.

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Age at symptom onset and death and disease duration in genetic frontotemporal dementia: an international retrospective cohort study.

Katrina M. Moore, +177 more
- 01 Feb 2020 - 
TL;DR: An international study of age at symptom onset, age at death, and disease duration in individuals with mutations in GRN, MAPT, and C9orf72 to investigate the extent to which variability in age at onset and at death could be accounted for by family membership and the specific mutation carried.
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Similarity of fMRI activity patterns in left perirhinal cortex reflects semantic similarity between words

TL;DR: An event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) experiment was determined how cosine similarity between fMRI response patterns to concrete words and pictures reflects semantic clustering and semantic distances between the represented entities within a single category.
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Core auditory processing deficits in primary progressive aphasia.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used non-linguistic stimuli devoid of meaning to assess pitch, timing and timbre in a consecutive series of 18 patients with primary progressive aphasia (eight with semantic variant, six with non-fluent/agrammatic variant, and four with logopenic variant), as well as 28 age-matched healthy controls.
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Comparison of ELISA- and SIMOA-based quantification of plasma Aβ ratios for early detection of cerebral amyloidosis.

TL;DR: ELISA and SIMOA demonstrated equivalent performances in detecting cerebral amyloidosis through plasma Aβ 1–42 /Aβ 1-40 , both with high negative predictive values, making them equally suitable non-invasive prescreening tools for clinical trials by reducing the number of necessary PET scans for clinical trial recruitment.
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Cross-modal representation of spoken and written word meaning in left pars triangularis.

TL;DR: This study provides direct evidence for the coding of word meaning in BA45 and positions its contribution to semantic processing at the confluence of input‐modality specific pathways that code for meaning within the respective input modalities.