联合记忆效应:挑战亨廷顿病的自私耻辱?

IF 4.1 Q1 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Brain communications Pub Date : 2024-12-09 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1093/braincomms/fcae440
Romain Dalléry, Nicolas Fraisse, Laurent Cléret de Langavant, Katia Youssov, Graça Morgado, Renaud Massart, Robin Schubert, Ralf Reilmann, Charlotte Jacquemot, Blanche Bapst, Monica Busse, David Craufurd, Anne Rosser, Marine Lunven, Anne-Catherine Bachoud-Lévi
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引用次数: 0

摘要

人们普遍认为患有亨廷顿舞蹈症的人表现出自私的行为,无视他人的想法、感受和行为,这一观点受到了患者组织和临床专家的挑战。为了进一步调查这一问题,并研究亨廷顿病患者是否能够注意到他人,我们对有伴侣和没有伴侣的亨廷顿病患者进行了一项联合记忆任务。这项研究包括69名早期亨廷顿舞蹈病的参与者和56名来自英国、法国和德国的健康对照者,他们参加了国际修复-亨廷顿舞蹈病多中心研究(NCT03119246)。参与者完成了三个类别的语义分类任务:动物、水果和蔬菜以及人造物体。他们要么单独完成任务(单独条件),要么与考官搭档完成任务(结对条件)。在配对条件下,参与者被分配到一个类别,他们的伴侣被分配到另一个类别,还有一个类别没有被分配。之后,参与者参与了一个无惊喜回忆任务,以记住尽可能多的单词。与分配给参与者和合作伙伴的单词相比,没有分配给任何人的单词被认为与社会无关。两组都表现出了预期的自我优先级效应,在两种情况下,他们都能比搭档或未分配的单词更好地回忆起分配给他们的单词。此外,还观察到联合记忆效应,在配对条件下,搭档分配的单词比未分配的单词回忆得更好(对照组:差异= 0.45,P < 0.001;患有亨廷顿舞蹈病的参与者:差异= 0.34,P < 0.001)。因此,与社会相关的词汇比不相关的词汇更容易被记忆。亨廷顿病患者的记忆单词数量与认知表现相关(p值均< 0.05),MRI分析显示关节记忆效应与右眼额叶灰质密度呈负相关。这些发现挑战了亨廷顿舞蹈症患者表现出自私行为是因为对他人不感兴趣的观念。他们表现出处理伴侣信息的能力,这意味着他们的社交困难可能是由社会认知缺陷以外的因素引起的。这为对亨廷顿舞蹈病患者的社会认知进行更多的生态评估打开了大门。
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The joint memory effect: challenging the selfish stigma in Huntington's disease?

The prevalent belief that individuals with Huntington's disease exhibit selfish behaviour, disregarding the thoughts, feelings and actions of others, has been challenged by patient organizations and clinical experts. To further investigate this issue and study whether participants with Huntington's disease can pay attention to others, a joint memory task was carried out in patients with Huntington's disease with and without a partner. This study involved 69 participants at an early stage of Huntington's disease and 56 healthy controls from the UK, France and Germany, who participated in the international Repair-HD multicentre study (NCT03119246). Participants completed a semantic categorization task across three categories: animals, fruits and vegetables and manufactured objects. They performed the task either alone (Alone condition) or with the examiner acting as a partner (Pair condition). In the Pair condition, the participant was assigned one category, their partner was assigned another and one category was left unassigned. Afterwards, participants engaged in a surprise free recall task to remember as many words as possible. Words not assigned to anyone were considered socially irrelevant in contrast to the ones assigned to the participant and to the partner. Both groups demonstrated the expected self-prioritization effect, recalling their assigned words better than their partner's or unassigned words in both conditions. Additionally, a joint memory effect was observed, with better recall for the partner's assigned words than the unassigned words in the Pair condition (controls: difference = 0.45, P < 0.001; participants with Huntington's disease: difference = 0.34, P < 0.001). Socially relevant words were thus better recalled than irrelevant words. The number of recalled words correlated with cognitive performance (all P-values < 0.05) and MRI analysis revealed a negative correlation between the joint memory effect and right orbitofrontal grey matter density in participants with Huntington's disease. These findings challenge the notion that individuals with Huntington's disease display selfish behaviours because of disinterest in others. They show the ability to process information about their partners, implying that their social difficulties may arise from factors other than social cognition deficits. This opens the door for more ecological assessments of social cognition in patients with Huntington's disease.

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