Literature DB >> 17727970

Virtual environment navigation tasks and the assessment of cognitive deficits in individuals with brain injury.

Sharon A Livingstone1, Ronald W Skelton.   

Abstract

Navigation in real environments is often impaired by traumatic brain injury (TBI). These deficits in wayfinding appear to be due to disruption of cognitive processes underlying navigation and may in turn be due to damage to the hippocampus and frontal lobes. These wayfinding problems after TBI were investigated using a virtual simulation of a Morris Water Maze (MWM), a standard test of hippocampal function in laboratory animals. The virtual environment consisted of a large virtual arena in a very large virtual room whose walls provided views of a naturalistic landscape. Eleven community-dwelling TBI survivors and 12 comparison participants, matched for gender, age and education were tested to see if they could find a location in the arena marked by one of the following: (a) a visible platform, (b) a single proximal object, (c) a single proximal object among seven other distracter objects, or (d) distal features inside and outside the room. The proximal objects allowed participants to use egocentric (body-centered) navigational strategies that rely on relatively simple stimulus-response associations. The absence of proximal cues forced the participants to rely on distal features of the environment (room walls, landscape elements) and tested their ability to use allocentric (world-based) navigational strategies requiring cognitive mapping. Results indicated that the navigation of TBI survivors was not impaired when the proximal cues were present but was impaired when proximal cues were absent. These results provide more evidence that the navigational deficit after TBI is due to an inability to form, remember or use cognitive maps.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17727970     DOI: 10.1016/j.bbr.2007.07.015

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Behav Brain Res        ISSN: 0166-4328            Impact factor:   3.332


  9 in total

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Authors:  Amanda A Braun; Robyn M Amos-Kroohs; Arnold Gutierrez; Kerstin H Lundgren; Kim B Seroogy; Matthew R Skelton; Charles V Vorhees; Michael T Williams
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2.  Treatment of mild traumatic brain injury with an erythropoietin-mimetic peptide.

Authors:  Claudia S Robertson; Robert Garcia; Samson Sujit Kumar Gaddam; Raymond J Grill; Carla Cerami Hand; Tian Siva Tian; H Julia Hannay
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3.  Dorsal striatal dopamine depletion impairs both allocentric and egocentric navigation in rats.

Authors:  Amanda A Braun; Devon L Graham; Tori L Schaefer; Charles V Vorhees; Michael T Williams
Journal:  Neurobiol Learn Mem       Date:  2012-03-21       Impact factor: 2.877

4.  Wayfinding and Glaucoma: A Virtual Reality Experiment.

Authors:  Fábio B Daga; Eduardo Macagno; Cory Stevenson; Ahmed Elhosseiny; Alberto Diniz-Filho; Erwin R Boer; Jürgen Schulze; Felipe A Medeiros
Journal:  Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci       Date:  2017-07-01       Impact factor: 4.799

5.  Impaired spatial navigation in pediatric anxiety.

Authors:  Sven C Mueller; Veronica Temple; Brian Cornwell; Christian Grillon; Daniel S Pine; Monique Ernst
Journal:  J Child Psychol Psychiatry       Date:  2009-07-06       Impact factor: 8.982

6.  Virtual navigation tested on a mobile app is predictive of real-world wayfinding navigation performance.

Authors:  Antoine Coutrot; Sophie Schmidt; Lena Coutrot; Jessica Pittman; Lynn Hong; Jan M Wiener; Christoph Hölscher; Ruth C Dalton; Michael Hornberger; Hugo J Spiers
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2019-03-18       Impact factor: 3.240

7.  Peering into the Brain through the Retrosplenial Cortex to Assess Cognitive Function of the Injured Brain.

Authors:  Helen Motanis; Laila N Khorasani; Christopher C Giza; Neil G Harris
Journal:  Neurotrauma Rep       Date:  2021-12-02

8.  Anomalous neural circuit function in schizophrenia during a virtual Morris water task.

Authors:  Bradley S Folley; Robert Astur; Kanchana Jagannathan; Vince D Calhoun; Godfrey D Pearlson
Journal:  Neuroimage       Date:  2009-12-04       Impact factor: 6.556

9.  Virtual reality in neurologic rehabilitation of spatial disorientation.

Authors:  Silvia Erika Kober; Guilherme Wood; Daniela Hofer; Walter Kreuzig; Manfred Kiefer; Christa Neuper
Journal:  J Neuroeng Rehabil       Date:  2013-02-08       Impact factor: 4.262

  9 in total

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