학술논문
Shallow Encoding and Forgetting Are Associated with Dependence in Instrumental Activities of Daily Living Among Older Adults Living with HIV Infection
Document Type
article
Author
Fazeli, PL; Doyle, KL; Scott, JC; Iudicello, JE; Casaletto, KB; Weber, E; Moore, DJ; Morgan, EE; Grant, I; Woods, SP; Hampton Atkinson, J; Ellis, RJ; Allen McCutchan, J; Marcotte, TD; Marquie-Beck, J; Sherman, M; Letendre, S; Capparelli, E; Schrier, R; Rosario, D; LeBlanc, S; Heaton, RK; Cherner, M; Dawson, M; Jernigan, T; Fennema-Notestine, C; Archibald, SL; Hesselink, J; Annese, J; Taylor, MJ; Masliah, E; Achim, C; Everall, I; Richman, D; Smith, DM; Lipton, S; Gamst, AC; Cushman, C; Abramson, I; Vaida, F; Deutsch, R; Umlauf, A
Source
Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology. 29(3)
Subject
Language
Abstract
Aging and HIV are both risk factors for memory deficits and declines in real-world functioning. However, we know little about the profile of memory deficits driving instrumental activities of daily living (IADL) declines across the lifespan in HIV. This study examined 145 younger (