早期至中期帕金森病患者棱镜适应率较低,但后遗症完整。

IF 2 3区 心理学 Q3 BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES Neuropsychologia Pub Date : 2023-10-10 DOI:10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2023.108681
Alex Swainson , Kathryn M. Woodward , Mihaela Boca , Michal Rolinski , Philip Collard , Nadia L. Cerminara , Richard Apps , Alan L. Whone , Iain D. Gilchrist
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引用次数: 0

摘要

关于帕金森病对运动适应的影响,目前有多种证据。一些研究报告称,患者表现出的适应能力与年龄匹配的对照组相当,而另一些研究则报告称,他们完全无法适应新的感觉扰动。在这里,早期到中期的帕金森氏症患者被招募来执行棱镜适应任务。与对照组相比,患者的初始适应速度较慢,但后遗症完整。这些结果支持了这样一种说法,即早期至中期帕金森病患者表现出由感觉预测错误驱动的完整适应,如完整的后遗症所示。但是,通过任务错误所告知的认知策略,表现出的促进作用受损,如初始适应受损所示。这些结果支持了最近的研究,这些研究表明,帕金森病患者保留了进行视觉运动适应的能力,但表现出对认知策略的改变,以帮助表现,并将这些先前的发现推广到经典的棱镜适应任务中。
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Slower rates of prism adaptation but intact aftereffects in patients with early to mid-stage Parkinson's disease

There is currently mixed evidence on the effect of Parkinson's disease on motor adaptation. Some studies report that patients display adaptation comparable to age-matched controls, while others report a complete inability to adapt to novel sensory perturbations. Here, early to mid-stage Parkinson's patients were recruited to perform a prism adaptation task. When compared to controls, patients showed slower rates of initial adaptation but intact aftereffects. These results support the suggestion that patients with early to mid-stage Parkinson's disease display intact adaptation driven by sensory prediction errors, as shown by the intact aftereffect. But impaired facilitation of performance through cognitive strategies informed by task error, as shown by the impaired initial adaptation. These results support recent studies that suggest that patients with Parkinson's disease retain the ability to perform visuomotor adaptation, but display altered use of cognitive strategies to aid performance and generalises these previous findings to the classical prism adaptation task.

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来源期刊
Neuropsychologia
Neuropsychologia 医学-行为科学
CiteScore
5.10
自引率
3.80%
发文量
228
审稿时长
4 months
期刊介绍: Neuropsychologia is an international interdisciplinary journal devoted to experimental and theoretical contributions that advance understanding of human cognition and behavior from a neuroscience perspective. The journal will consider for publication studies that link brain function with cognitive processes, including attention and awareness, action and motor control, executive functions and cognitive control, memory, language, and emotion and social cognition.
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