Impaired visuospatial transformation but intact sequence processing in parkinson disease
Impaired visuospatial transformation but intact sequence processing in parkinson disease
Objective: we examined whether visuospatial deficits in Parkinson disease (PD) can be explained by a domain-general, nonspatial impairment in the sequencing or serial chaining of mental operations.
Background: PD has been shown to be associated with impaired visuospatial processing, but the mechanisms of this impairment remain unclear.
Methods: thirteen patients with PD and 20 age-matched, neu-rologically normal controls performed a visuospatial grid navigation task requiring sequential spatial transformations. The participants also performed a control task of serial number subtraction designed to assess their nonvisuospatial sequencing. The tasks were matched in structure and difficulty. Results: The patients were impaired on the visuospatial task but not in serial number subtraction. This finding suggests that vi-suospatial processing impairments in PD do not derive from a general impairment affecting sequencing or serial chaining.
Conclusions: we argue that visuospatial deficits in PD result from impairments to spatial transformation routines involved in the computation of mappings between spatial locations. These routines are mediated by dopaminergic pathways linking the basal ganglia, prefrontal cortex, supplementary motor area, and parietal cortex.
Parkinson disease, Sequence processing, Visuospatial impairment
130-138
Leek, E. Charles
6f63c405-e28f-4f8c-8ead-3b0a79c7dc88
Kerai, Julie H.
4ebfc912-956b-45a7-ba33-d036b556bbce
Johnston, Stephen J.
4f381ad2-12a5-443a-a5ff-ecb781e2ec6d
Hindle, John V.
4fa09b24-f989-4a0f-b61b-9de61d5bc411
Bracewell, R. Martyn
87f5de6c-9e45-4197-b734-60f2065e4cd5
September 2014
Leek, E. Charles
6f63c405-e28f-4f8c-8ead-3b0a79c7dc88
Kerai, Julie H.
4ebfc912-956b-45a7-ba33-d036b556bbce
Johnston, Stephen J.
4f381ad2-12a5-443a-a5ff-ecb781e2ec6d
Hindle, John V.
4fa09b24-f989-4a0f-b61b-9de61d5bc411
Bracewell, R. Martyn
87f5de6c-9e45-4197-b734-60f2065e4cd5
Leek, E. Charles, Kerai, Julie H., Johnston, Stephen J., Hindle, John V. and Bracewell, R. Martyn
(2014)
Impaired visuospatial transformation but intact sequence processing in parkinson disease.
Cognitive and Behavioral Neurology, 27 (3), .
(doi:10.1097/WNN.0000000000000032).
Abstract
Objective: we examined whether visuospatial deficits in Parkinson disease (PD) can be explained by a domain-general, nonspatial impairment in the sequencing or serial chaining of mental operations.
Background: PD has been shown to be associated with impaired visuospatial processing, but the mechanisms of this impairment remain unclear.
Methods: thirteen patients with PD and 20 age-matched, neu-rologically normal controls performed a visuospatial grid navigation task requiring sequential spatial transformations. The participants also performed a control task of serial number subtraction designed to assess their nonvisuospatial sequencing. The tasks were matched in structure and difficulty. Results: The patients were impaired on the visuospatial task but not in serial number subtraction. This finding suggests that vi-suospatial processing impairments in PD do not derive from a general impairment affecting sequencing or serial chaining.
Conclusions: we argue that visuospatial deficits in PD result from impairments to spatial transformation routines involved in the computation of mappings between spatial locations. These routines are mediated by dopaminergic pathways linking the basal ganglia, prefrontal cortex, supplementary motor area, and parietal cortex.
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More information
Published date: September 2014
Keywords:
Parkinson disease, Sequence processing, Visuospatial impairment
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 494512
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/494512
ISSN: 1543-3633
PURE UUID: 338a2ca9-0857-4325-bdfe-ff581c32d759
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Date deposited: 10 Oct 2024 16:30
Last modified: 11 Oct 2024 02:09
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Contributors
Author:
E. Charles Leek
Author:
Julie H. Kerai
Author:
Stephen J. Johnston
Author:
John V. Hindle
Author:
R. Martyn Bracewell
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