| Literature DB >> 28642572 |
Jingru Wang1, Xiaojun Guo1, Xianbo Zhuang1, Tuanzhi Chen1, Wei Yan2.
Abstract
Our perception of the world is remarkably stable despite of distorted retinal input due to frequent eye movements. It is considered that the brain uses corollary discharge, efference copies of signals sent from motor to visual regions, to compensate for distortions and stabilize visual perception. In this study, we tested whether patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) have impaired corollary discharge functions as evidenced by reduced compensation during the perception of optic flow that mimics self-motion in the environment. We asked a group of early-stage AD patients and age-matched healthy controls to indicate the perceived direction of self-motion based on optic flow while tracking a moving target with smooth pursuit eye movement, or keeping eye fixation at a stationary target. We first replicated the previous findings that healthy participants were able to compensate for distorted optic flow in the presence of eye movements, as indicated by similar performance of self-motion perception between pursuit and fixation conditions. In stark contrast, AD patients showed impaired self-motion perception when the optic flow was distorted by eye movements. Our results suggest that early-stage AD pathology is associated with disrupted eye movement compensation during self-motion perception.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28642572 PMCID: PMC5481347 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-04377-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Optic flow perception task and experimental conditions. Participants faced a CRT monitor displaying a cloud of moving dots mimicking the observer’s forward translation on a straight path. The focus of expansion (FOE), which determines the direction of self-motion, could be at one of the six potential positions in a single trial. Participants were asked if perceived direction is to the left- or right- side of the dead ahead. In the fixation condition participants kept their gaze constant whereas in the pursuit conditions they made pursuit eye movements to track the moving cross.
Figure 2Psychometric performance of self-motion perception in the fixation and pursuit conditions for AD patients (A) and healthy elderly participants (B). Error bars denote mean and SEM.
Figure 3Averaged perceptual bias (indicated by PSE) and perceptual sensitivity (indicated by Sigma) derived from the psychometric function for AD patients (A) and healthy participants (B) in each condition. Error bars denote mean and SEM.