| Literature DB >> 24109467 |
Masami Ishihara1, Patrice Revol, Sophie Jacquin-Courtois, Romaine Mayet, Gilles Rode, Dominique Boisson, Alessandro Farnè, Yves Rossetti.
Abstract
The effect of the presentation of two different auditory pitches (high and low) on manual line-bisection performance was studied to investigate the relationship between space and magnitude representations underlying motor acts. Participants were asked to mark the midpoint of a given line with a pen while they were listening a pitch via headphones. In healthy participants, the effect of the presentation order (blocked or alternative way) of auditory stimuli was tested (Experiment 1). The results showed no biasing effect of pitch in blocked-order presentation, whereas the alternative presentation modulated the line-bisection. Lower pitch produced leftward or downward bisection biases whereas higher pitch produced rightward or upward biases, suggesting that visuomotor processing can be spatially modulated by irrelevant auditory cues. In Experiment 2, the effect of such alternative stimulations in line bisection in right brain damaged patients with a unilateral neglect and without a neglect was tested. Similar biasing effects caused by auditory cues were observed although the white noise presentation also affected the patient's performance. Additionally, the effect of pitch difference was larger for the neglect patient than for the no-neglect patient as well as for healthy participants. The neglect patient's bisection performance gradually improved during the experiment and was maintained even after 1 week. It is therefore, concluded that auditory cues, characterized by both the pitch difference and the dynamic alternation, influence spatial representations. The larger biasing effect seen in the neglect patient compared to the no-neglect patient and healthy participants suggests that auditory cues could modulate the direction of the attentional bias that is characteristic of neglect patients. Thus, the alternative presentation of auditory cues could be used as rehabilitation for neglect patients. The space-pitch associations are discussed in terms of a generalized magnitude system.Entities:
Keywords: human; line bisection; pitch perception; rehabilitation; space representation; unilateral neglect
Year: 2013 PMID: 24109467 PMCID: PMC3791388 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00704
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Figure 1(A) The mean deviations of line bisection for pitch in each presentation order. (B) The mean deviations of line bisection for horizontal and vertical line orientation.
Figure 2(A) The mean deviations of line bisection for auditory pitch in each patient. MRI scans of the neglect and no-neglect patients are presented together. The mean deviations for each pitch in healthy participants of Experiment 1 (horizontal orientation with alternative pitch presentation condition) were also imposed on the figure. Each bar indicates the range of one standard error. (B) The mean values of high/low pitch difference in each participant (filled circle: neglect patient; unfilled circle: no-neglect patient; filled diamond: normal healthy participants). Each bar indicates the standard deviation. The arrow indicates the data point of a selected healthy participant used for specific analyses specified in the text.
Figure 3A shift of the deviation as a function of the trial in each patient (filled circle: neglect; unfilled circle: no neglect). The patients started with 10 bisections performed with a white noise. During this period a transient trend was observed in both patients, followed by a plateau. The neglect patient then performed the task with the pitch alternation of “Low, High, Low, High, … ” for the first half 10 trials and “High, Low, High, Low, … ” for the later half 10 trials. The no-neglect patient performed the task with the reversed order of alternation: “High, Low, High, Low, … ” for the first half 10 trials and “Low, High, Low, High, … ” for the later half 10 trials. During this period the no-neglect patient exhibited a stable performance while the neglect patient showed a sustained improvement of her bisection bias what turned into an over-compensation, i.e., leftward bisection bias. Then, after a week, the neglect patient performed 10 bisections with the white noise again, showing a sustained effect in the neglect patient. The mean deviations of line bisection (standard neuropsychological test without auditory stimulation, horizontal orientation, 200 mm in length) in the neglect patient in 4 and 5 months before the experiment are also plotted.