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Daniel Adrover-Roig

Researcher at University of the Balearic Islands

Publications -  48
Citations -  1992

Daniel Adrover-Roig is an academic researcher from University of the Balearic Islands. The author has contributed to research in topics: Specific language impairment & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 43 publications receiving 1656 citations. Previous affiliations of Daniel Adrover-Roig include Université de Montréal & Queen Mary University of London.

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Construct validity of the Trail Making Test: Role of task-switching, working memory, inhibition/interference control, and visuomotor abilities

TL;DR: The results suggest that T MT-A requires mainly visuoperceptual abilities, TMT-B reflects primarily working memory and secondarily task-switching ability, while B-A minimizes visu operceptual and working memory demands, providing a relatively pure indicator of executive control abilities.
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Trail Making Test in traumatic brain injury, schizophrenia, and normal ageing: Sample comparisons and normative data

TL;DR: Normal ageing impaired both direct and derived TMT indices, as revealed by lower scores in the healthy elderly group as compared with young (16-24) and middle-aged (25-54) healthy participants.
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Therapy-induced neuroplasticity in chronic aphasia

TL;DR: The results of the present study suggest that a significant activation of BA4/6 could indicate the use of SFA to achieve successful outcome, and suggest that greater SFA improvement in chronic aphasia is associated with recruitment of areas in the left hemisphere.
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Interference Control In Elderly Bilinguals: Appearances Can Be Misleading.

TL;DR: Elderly bilinguals and monolinguals have equivalent interference control abilities, but relay on different neural substrates, and a modulation of frontal activity with task-dynamic control of interference suggests that elderly bilinguals deal with interference control without recruiting a circuit that is particularly vulnerable to aging.
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Individual differences in aging and cognitive control modulate the neural indexes of context updating and maintenance during task switching.

TL;DR: The additive association found between age and cognitive control for different behavioural indexes of task-switch costs suggests a differential influence of these factors upon two successive information processing stages.