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Connections, Cognition And Alzheimer's
Disease May 1996
A major theme in many of the speakers is that cognitive
impairment in Alzheimer's disease is referable to loss
of specific populations of projection neurons and the
breakdown of highly vulnerable neural systems, especially
those involved in memory formation. There is general
consensus among these speakers that these neuronal alterations
occur largely indepedent of amyloid deposition.
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- Yves Christen
Welcome and Introduction
- Heiko Braak, University of Frankfurt
Pattern of Alzheimer's disease-related cortical lesions
- Gary Van Hoesen, University of Iowa, Iowa City
Corticocortical and corticofugal neural systems in Alzheimer's disease
- Charles Duyckaerts, Hopital de la Salpetriere, Paris
Plaques and tangles: Where and when
- Patrick Vermersch, INSERM, Lille
Cortical mapping of pathological tau proteins in several neurodegenerative
disorders
- Dr. Patrick Hof, Mt. Sinai School of Medicine
Dementia as a neocortical disconnection syndrome: morphological and
biochemical characterization of the vulnerable neurons
- Dick Swaab and Ahmad Salehi, Netherlands Institute for Brain Research
Alzheimer changes in hypothalamic nuclei: Their relationship to neuronal
activity and clinical symptoms
- Dora Games, Athena
Alzheimer-type neuropathology in the PDAPP transgenic mouse
- Eliezer Masliah, University of California, San Diego
Mechanisms of synaptic dysfunction in Alzheimer's disease
- Mark West, University of Aarhus
Is Alzheimer's disease accelerated aging? Different patterns of age and
AD-related neuronal losses in the hippocampus
- Bradley Hyman, Massachusetts General Hospital
Anatomical basis of cognitive impairment in Alzheimer's disease
- James Haxby, National Institute of Mental Health
Distributed, hierarchical systems for face memory in human cortex
- Antonio Damasio, University of Iowa, Iowa City
Large-scale neural models of cognition
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