“…Family history increases the risk of developing LOAD (Bertram et al, 2010;Mosconi et al, 2010), and is second only to high age as an epidemiological risk factor. As published previously, persons who are at risk of developing LOAD because of their family history, which can be in part demonstrated by possession of the apolipoprotein E (APOE) ε4 allele, show altered functional and anatomical connectivities (Bendlin et al, 2010;Sánchez et al, 2017;Sheline and Raichle, 2013;Sheng et al, 2017), changes in cognitive variables (Abulafia et al, 2018;Ballard and O'Sullivan, 2013;Loewenstein et al, 2016;Rapp and Reischies, 2005;Reinvang et al, 2012), and abnormal brain structure (Duarte-Abritta et al, 2018;During et al, 2011;Mosconi et al, 2014Mosconi et al, , 2013Reiman et al, 2005). In particular, we observed in a sample of offspring of LOAD patients (O-LOAD) that functional connectivity was related to subtle cognitive alterations in episodic memory and the capacity to recover from semantic interference effects during learning when compared to healthy control subjects (CS) (Sánchez et al, 2017).…”