Language Abnormalities in Alzheimer's Disease Arise from Reduced Informativeness: A Cross-Linguistic Study in English and Persian.

Sabereh Bayat, Mahya Santai, Mehrdad Mohammad Panahi, Amirhossein Khodadadi, Mahdieh Ghassimi, Sahar Rezaei,Sara Besharat, Zahra Mahboubi, Mostafa Almasi,Morteza Sanei Taheri,Bradford C Dickerson,Neguine Rezaii

medRxiv : the preprint server for health sciences(2024)

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摘要
INTRODUCTION:This research investigates the psycholinguistic origins of language impairments in Alzheimer's Disease (AD), questioning if these impairments result from language-specific structural disruptions or from a universal deficit in generating meaningful content. METHODS:Cross-linguistic analysis was conducted on language samples from 184 English and 52 Persian speakers, comprising both AD patients and healthy controls, to extract various language features. Furthermore, we introduced a machine learning-based metric, Language Informativeness Index (LII), to quantify informativeness. RESULTS:Indicators of AD in English were found to be highly predictive of AD in Persian, with a 92.3% classification accuracy. Additionally, we found robust correlations between the typical linguistic abnormalities of AD and language emptiness (low LII) across both languages. DISCUSSION:Findings suggest AD linguistics impairments are attributed to a core universal difficulty in generating informative messages. Our approach underscores the importance of incorporating biocultural diversity into research, fostering the development of inclusive diagnostic tools.
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