| Literature DB >> 28603772 |
Alan Robert Bowman1, Vicki Bruce2, Christopher J Colbourn1, Daniel Collerton3.
Abstract
Visual hallucinations are a common, distressing, and disabling symptom of Lewy body and other diseases. Current models suggest that interactions in internal cognitive processes generate hallucinations. However, these neglect external factors. Pareidolic illusions are an experimental analogue of hallucinations. They are easily induced in Lewy body disease, have similar content to spontaneous hallucinations, and respond to cholinesterase inhibitors in the same way. We used a primed pareidolia task with hallucinating participants with Lewy body disorders (n = 16), non-hallucinating participants with Lewy body disorders (n = 19), and healthy controls (n = 20). Participants were presented with visual "noise" that sometimes contained degraded visual objects and were required to indicate what they saw. Some perceptions were cued in advance by a visual prime. Results showed that hallucinating participants were impaired in discerning visual signals from noise, with a relaxed criterion threshold for perception compared to both other groups. After the presentation of a visual prime, the criterion was comparable to the other groups. The results suggest that participants with hallucinations compensate for perceptual deficits by relaxing perceptual criteria, at a cost of seeing things that are not there, and that visual cues regularize perception. This latter finding may provide a mechanism for understanding the interaction between environments and hallucinations.Entities:
Keywords: Dementia; Lewy body disorders; Pareidolia; Parkinson’s disease; Signal detection theory; Visual hallucinations
Year: 2017 PMID: 28603772 PMCID: PMC5442189 DOI: 10.1186/s41235-017-0063-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cogn Res Princ Implic ISSN: 2365-7464
Fig. 1Examples of naturally occurring pareidolia: (a) elephant rock (Delso, 2014); (b) face in tree trunk (Denyer, n.d.)
Sample characteristics
| HC | VH– | VH+ | |
|---|---|---|---|
| n | 20 | 19 | 16 |
| Age (years) | 69.3 (6.55) | 66.5 (8.02) | 71.06 (6.75) |
| Females (n)a | 14 | 7 | 3 |
| Visual acuitya | 0.93 (0.33) | 0.97 (0.42) | 0.66 (0.22) |
| Cognitive abilityb | 27.9 (1.66) | 25.6 (2.89) | 22.7 (2.47) |
| Medications (n) | – | 4.84 (3.59) | 6.25 (3.26) |
| Parkinsonism severityc | – | 33.4 (18.47) | 53.8 (18.58) |
a p < 0.05
b p < 0.001
c p < 0.01
Fig. 2Exemplar stimuli from the pareidolia experiment. Stimuli include a signal trial (target item is a teapot, mid-right of visual scene) (a), a noise trial (b), a prime item (c), and a “no prime” item (d)
Within-group and between-group comparisons of pareidolia rate
| Group | Unprimed | Primed |
|---|---|---|
| Pareidolia rate (noise trials) | ||
| HC | 1.35 (1.63) | 0.55 (0.89), |
| VH– | 0.84 (1.38) | 0.53 (0.70), |
| VH+ | 6.13 (3.54) | 4.80 (3.17), |
| Pareidolia rate (signal trials) | ||
| HC | 0.00 (0.00) | 0.10 (0.31) |
| VH– | 0.05 (0.23) | 0.05 (0.23), |
| VH+ | 3.50 (2.92) | 2.38 (2.33), |
Hit rate, false alarm (FA) rate, sensitivity (d'), and response bias (c) across groups
| Group | Unprimed | Primed | Unprimed | Primed |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hit rate | FA rate | |||
| HC | 0.75 (0.20) | 0.88 (0.14)a | 0.14 (0.15) | 0.05 (0.10)b |
| VH- | 0.72 (0.19) | 0.83 (0.13)b | 0.08 (0.13) | 0.07 (0.07) |
| VH+ | 0.53 (0.24)c | 0.59 (0.26)c | 0.63 (0.38)c | 0.49 (0.35)c |
| D prime | Criterion | |||
| HC | 2.37 (0.8) | 2.85 (0.54)b | −0.04 (0.41) | 0.02 (0.2) |
| VH- | 2.33 (0.84) | 2.68 (0.39) | 0.11 (0.31) | 0.03 (0.26) |
| VH+ | 0.46 (1.15)c | 0.64 (0.91)c | 0.28 (0.55)d | −0.14 (0.68) |
aSignificant effect of prime (p < 0.05)
bSignificant effect of prime (p > 0.05)
cVH+ significantly different to HC and VH– (p < 0.001)
dVH+ significantly different to VH– group only (p < 0.001)