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Detecting accelerated long-term forgetting remotely in a community sample of people with epilepsy: Evidence from the Crimes and Four Doors tests

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  • Richard J Allen
  • Steven Kemp
  • Amy L Atkinson
  • Sarah Martin
  • Kata Pauly-Takacs
  • Courtney M Goodridge
  • Ami Gilliland
  • Alan D. Baddeley
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<mark>Journal publication date</mark>31/01/2025
<mark>Journal</mark>Cortex
Volume182
Number of pages13
Pages (from-to)29-41
Publication StatusPublished
Early online date22/08/24
<mark>Original language</mark>English

Abstract

People with epilepsy often report experiencing memory problems though these are not always detectable using standard neuropsychological measures. One form of difficulty that may be relatively prevalent in epilepsy is termed accelerated long-term forgetting (ALF), typically described as relatively greater loss of memory over days or weeks following initial encoding. The current study used remote assessment to examine memory and forgetting over one week in a broad community sample of people with epilepsy and healthy control participants, using two recently developed tests, one verbal (the Crimes test) and one visual (the Four Doors test). These were administered as part of a short battery of cognitive measures, run remotely with participants over Zoom. Across this community-derived sample, people with epilepsy reported more memory complaints and demonstrated significantly faster forgetting on both the verbal and visual tests. This difference was not attributable to level of initial learning performance and was not detectable through delayed recall on a standard existing test. Our results suggests that ALF may be more common than suspected in people with epilepsy, leading to a potentially important source of memory problems that are currently undetected by standard memory tests.