Digital language measures capture episodic memory disruptions in people with human immunodeficiency virus: A machine learning study.

Journal: The Clinical neuropsychologist
Published Date:

Abstract

Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) often affects episodic memory. Yet, standard measures of this domain are derived from clinicians' simple counts of recalled and omitted pieces of information, undermining robustness, informativeness, and scalability. Here, we present an automated natural language processing (NLP) approach that tackles such limitations. We recruited 92 participants (50 people living with HIV and 42 controls), who performed a story retelling task. Using NLP tools, we compared the retellings and the original story in terms of verbosity, semantic acuity, and organizational structure. We found that people living with HIV produced fewer nouns and had poorer semantic acuity and organizational similarity. Moreover, machine learning classifiers robustly differentiated between the two groups. These results suggest that our digital approach can reveal fine-grained episodic memory alterations in people living with HIV, offering an objective, scalable, and cost-effective complement to standard cognitive testing.

Authors

  • Lucas Federico Sterpin
    Centro de Neurociencias Cognitivas, Universidad de San Andrés, Buenos Aires, Argentina.
  • Camilo Avendaño Avello
    Cognitive Neuroscience Center, University of San Andrés, Buenos Aires, Argentina.
  • Jeremías Inchauspe
    Cognitive Neuroscience Center, University of San Andrés, Buenos Aires, Argentina.
  • Gonzalo Nicolás Pérez
    Cognitive Neuroscience Center, University of San Andrés, Buenos Aires, Argentina.
  • Franco J Ferrante
    Centro de Neurociencias Cognitivas, Universidad de San Andrés, Buenos Aires, Argentina.
  • Agustina Birba
    Cognitive Neuroscience Center, University of San Andrés, Buenos Aires, Argentina.
  • Carolina A Gattei
    National Scientific and Technical Research Council (CONICET), Argentina.
  • Lorena Abusamra
    Hospital Dr. Diego Thompson, Buenos Aires, Argentina.
  • Bárbara Sampedro
    Facultad de Filosofía y Letras, Instituto de Lingüística, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Buenos Aires, Argentina.
  • Valeria Abusamra
    Cognitive Neuroscience Center, University of San Andrés, Buenos Aires, Argentina.
  • Lucía Amoruso
    Centro de Neurociencias Cognitivas, Universidad de San Andrés, Buenos Aires, Argentina.
  • Adolfo M García
    Laboratory of Experimental Psychology and Neuroscience (LPEN), Institute of Cognitive and Translational Neuroscience (INCYT), INECO Foundation, Favaloro University, Buenos Aires, Argentina.

Keywords

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