Literature DB >> 18242648

Orienting of spatial attention in Huntington's Disease.

Maryline Couette1, Anne-Catherine Bachoud-Levi, Pierre Brugieres, Eric Sieroff, Paolo Bartolomeo.   

Abstract

To explore the functioning of spatial attention in Huntington's Disease (HD), 14 HD patients and 14 age-matched controls performed a cued response time (RT) task with peripheral cues. In Experiment 1, cues were not informative about the future target location, thus eliciting a purely exogenous orienting of attention. At short stimulus-onset asynchrony (SOA), controls showed an initial facilitation for cued locations, later replaced by a cost (inhibition of return, IOR). Patients had a larger and more persistent validity effect, with delayed IOR, resulting from a larger cost for uncued targets. This suggests an impairment of attentional disengaging from cued locations. In Experiment 2, 80% of the cues were valid, thus inducing an initially exogenous, and later endogenous, attentional shift towards the cued box. The validity effect was larger in patients than in controls, again as a result of a disproportionate cost for uncued targets. In Experiment 3, 80% of the cues were invalid, thus inviting participants to endogenously re-orient attention towards the uncued box. Patients could take advantage of invalid cues to re-orient their attention towards the uncued targets but at a longer SOA than controls, thus suggesting that endogenous orienting is preserved in HD, but slowed down by the disengage deficit. The disengage deficit correlated with several radiological and biological markers of HD, thus suggesting a causal relationship between HD and attentional impairments. Cued RT tasks are promising tools for the clinical monitoring of HD and of its potential treatments.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 18242648     DOI: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2007.12.017

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neuropsychologia        ISSN: 0028-3932            Impact factor:   3.139


  7 in total

1.  Frontal cortex BOLD signal changes in premanifest Huntington disease: a possible fMRI biomarker.

Authors:  Stefania Ferraro; Lorenzo Nanetti; Sylvie Piacentini; Maria L Mandelli; Nicola Bertolino; Francesco Ghielmetti; Francesca Epifani; Anna Nigri; Franco Taroni; Maria G Bruzzone; Stefano Di Donato; Mario Savoiardo; Caterina Mariotti; Marina Grisoli
Journal:  Neurology       Date:  2014-06-04       Impact factor: 9.910

2.  Dopaminergic Control of Attentional Flexibility: Inhibition of Return is Associated with the Dopamine Transporter Gene (DAT1).

Authors:  Lorenza S Colzato; Jay Pratt; Bernhard Hommel
Journal:  Front Hum Neurosci       Date:  2010-07-13       Impact factor: 3.169

Review 3.  Neurophysiological mechanisms involved in language learning in adults.

Authors:  Antoni Rodríguez-Fornells; Toni Cunillera; Anna Mestres-Missé; Ruth de Diego-Balaguer
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2009-12-27       Impact factor: 6.237

4.  Striatal degeneration impairs language learning: evidence from Huntington's disease.

Authors:  R De Diego-Balaguer; M Couette; G Dolbeau; A Dürr; K Youssov; A-C Bachoud-Lévi
Journal:  Brain       Date:  2008-10-07       Impact factor: 13.501

5.  Spatially distributed encoding of covert attentional shifts in human thalamus.

Authors:  Oliver J Hulme; Louise Whiteley; Stewart Shipp
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2010-09-15       Impact factor: 2.714

6.  Deficient sustained attention to response task and P300 characteristics in early Huntington's disease.

Authors:  E P Hart; E M Dumas; R H A M Reijntjes; K van der Hiele; S J A van den Bogaard; H A M Middelkoop; R A C Roos; J G van Dijk
Journal:  J Neurol       Date:  2011-12-06       Impact factor: 4.849

7.  Selective impairment of attentional networks of alerting in Wilson's disease.

Authors:  Yongsheng Han; Fangfang Zhang; Yanghua Tian; Panpan Hu; Bo Li; Kai Wang
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2014-06-20       Impact factor: 3.240

  7 in total

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