This protocol describes a study aimed at evaluating the psychometric properties of the ExéSem battery, developed to differentiate semantic deficits from executive semantic impairments in patients with post-lesional or neurodegenerative anomia. Currently available tools do not allow a straightforward distinction between these deficits, limiting diagnostic accuracy and clinical management. The ExéSem battery was developed through a collaboration between Hospices Civils de Lyon, the University of Mons, and Laval University to address this gap. The battery includes three main tasks: (1) a dual task combining semantic judgment and semantic matching using identical items, (2) a word-picture matching task, and (3) a rapid naming task. Each task is designed to manipulate the level of executive control required to access semantic representations. This allows the identification of whether performance declines under increased executive demand, thereby distinguishing executive-related semantic impairments.
This protocol describes a study aimed at evaluating the psychometric properties of the ExéSem battery, developed to differentiate semantic deficits from executive semantic impairments in patients with post-lesional or neurodegenerative anomia. Currently available tools do not allow a straightforward distinction between these deficits, limiting diagnostic accuracy and clinical management. The ExéSem battery was developed through a collaboration between Hospices Civils de Lyon, the University of Mons, and Laval University to address this gap. The battery includes three main tasks: (1) a dual task combining semantic judgment and semantic matching using identical items, (2) a word-picture matching task, and (3) a rapid naming task. Each task is designed to manipulate the level of executive control required to access semantic representations. This allows the identification of whether performance declines under increased executive demand, thereby distinguishing executive-related semantic impairments. The primary objective is to assess the sensitivity of the ExéSem battery by comparing performances between participants with neurocognitive disorders (mild or major) and cognitively healthy controls. Secondary objectives include evaluating specificity, concurrent validity through comparison with established neuropsychological tests (BECLA, Trail Making Test, Stroop), and the influence of demographic variables (age, sex, education level). This is a prospective, experimental, comparative, single-center study, classified as a non-interventional study involving human participants (RIPH3). Two populations will be included: cognitively healthy individuals and patients diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease, vascular neurocognitive disorder, or semantic variant primary progressive aphasia. Participants will be aged 50 to 90 years, native French speakers, affiliated with a social security system, and informed with non-opposition collected. The primary endpoint is the total score on the ExéSem battery (maximum score: 172). Secondary endpoints include sub-scores for each task (semantic judgment and matching, word-picture matching, rapid naming), as well as performance on reference tests to assess convergent validity. The effects of age, sex, and education level, as well as task completion times, will also be analyzed. A single study visit is planned. After receiving information and a reflection period, participants will complete demographic questionnaires and undergo cognitive assessments, including screening tests (MoCA, DTLA for controls), reference tests (Trail Making Test, Stroop, BECLA), and the ExéSem battery. The total duration of testing is approximately 80 minutes, including 30 minutes for ExéSem. Risks are minimal and mainly related to cognitive fatigue. Participants with abnormal screening results will be referred for further clinical evaluation outside the study. This research aims to improve diagnostic accuracy in semantic disorders and to better guide cognitive rehabilitation strategies. * Alzheimer's disease * Vascular neurocognitive disorder * Progressive Primary Aphasia semantic variant * People without neurocognitive disorder
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
140
The ExéSem battery is a neuropsychological assessment tool designed to evaluate semantic processing and the contribution of executive control in patients with or without neurocognitive disorders. It consists of three tasks: (1) a dual task combining semantic judgment and semantic matching using identical items, (2) a word-to-picture matching task, and (3) a rapid naming task. Each task is structured to manipulate the level of executive demand required to access semantic representations. This variation allows the identification of whether semantic difficulties remain stable or worsen under increased executive load, thereby distinguishing primary semantic deficits from executive-related semantic impairments. The battery is administered by a trained professional using standardized instructions and requires approximately 30 minutes to complete. It is used for diagnostic and research purposes only and does not involve any therapeutic intervention.
Hopital des CHARPENNES ( Hospices Civils de Lyon)
Lyon, France
Score obtained on the ExéSem battery
The primary outcome is the total score on the ExéSem battery (max=172), assessing semantic and executive-semantic processing. The battery includes semantic judgment (30 items), semantic matching (20 items), word-image matching (72 items), and rapid naming (50 items). Tasks vary in executive demand to determine whether performance declines under increased cognitive load, distinguishing primary semantic deficits from executive-related impairments.
Time frame: At enrollment
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