Literature DB >> 29277173

Novel Tool Selection in Left Brain-Damaged Patients With Apraxia of Tool Use: A Study of Three Cases.

François Osiurak1, Marine Granjon1, Isabelle Bonnevie1, Joël Brogniart1, Laura Mechtouff2, Amandine Benoit2, Norbert Nighoghossian2, Mathieu Lesourd1.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Recent evidence indicates that some left brain-damaged (LBD) patients have difficulties to use familiar tools because of the inability to reason about physical object properties. A fundamental issue is to understand the residual capacity of those LBD patients in tool selection.
METHODS: Three LBD patients with tool use disorders, three right brain-damaged (RBD) patients, and six matched healthy controls performed a novel tool selection task, consisting in extracting a target out from a box by selecting the relevant tool among eight, four, or two tools. Three criteria were manipulated to make relevant and irrelevant tools (size, rigidity, shape).
RESULTS: LBD patients selected a greater number of irrelevant tools and had more difficulties to solve the task compared to RBD patients and controls. All participants committed more errors for selecting relevant tools based on rigidity and shape than size. In some LBD patients, the difficulties persisted even in the 2-Choice condition.
CONCLUSIONS: Our findings confirm that tool use disorders result from impaired technical reasoning, leading patients to meet difficulties in selecting tools based on their physical properties. We also go further by showing that these difficulties can decrease as the choice is reduced, at least for some properties, opening new avenues for rehabilitation programs. (JINS, 2018, 24, 524-529).

Entities:  

Keywords:  Apraxia; Left brain damage; Mechanical knowledge; Technical reasoning; Tool selection; Tool use

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 29277173     DOI: 10.1017/S135561771700131X

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Int Neuropsychol Soc        ISSN: 1355-6177            Impact factor:   2.892


  1 in total

1.  Development of a control task for clarifying the neural mechanisms underlying tool-use behavior in rats (Rattus norvegicus).

Authors:  Akane Nagano
Journal:  MethodsX       Date:  2019-11-27
  1 in total

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