Literature DB >> 29777676

Cognitive effects of rhythmic auditory stimulation in Parkinson's disease: A P300 study.

Juan Lei1, Nadine Conradi2, Cornelius Abel3, Stefan Frisch4, Alla Brodski-Guerniero5, Marcel Hildner6, Christian A Kell7, Jochen Kaiser8, Maren Schmidt-Kassow8.   

Abstract

Rhythmic auditory stimulation (RAS) may compensate dysfunctions of the basal ganglia (BG), involved with intrinsic evaluation of temporal intervals and action initiation or continuation. In the cognitive domain, RAS containing periodically presented tones facilitates young healthy participants' attention allocation to anticipated time points, indicated by better performance and larger P300 amplitudes to periodic compared to random stimuli. Additionally, active auditory-motor synchronization (AMS) leads to a more precise temporal encoding of stimuli via embodied timing encoding than stimulus presentation adapted to the participants' actual movements. Here we investigated the effect of RAS and AMS in Parkinson's disease (PD). 23 PD patients and 23 healthy age-matched controls underwent an auditory oddball task. We manipulated the timing (periodic/random/adaptive) and setting (pedaling/sitting still) of stimulation. While patients elicited a general timing effect, i.e., larger P300 amplitudes for periodic versus random tones for both, sitting and pedaling conditions, controls showed a timing effect only for the sitting but not for the pedaling condition. However, a correlation between P300 amplitudes and motor variability in the periodic pedaling condition was obtained in control participants only. We conclude that RAS facilitates attentional processing of temporally predictable external events in PD patients as well as healthy controls, but embodied timing encoding via body movement does not affect stimulus processing due to BG impairment in patients. Moreover, even with intact embodied timing encoding, such as healthy elderly, the effect of AMS depends on the degree of movement synchronization performance, which is very low in the current study.
Copyright © 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Auditory-motor synchronization; ERP; Neurodegenerative disease; Temporal predictability

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29777676     DOI: 10.1016/j.brainres.2018.05.016

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Brain Res        ISSN: 0006-8993            Impact factor:   3.252


  3 in total

1.  Effect of Short-Term Metro-Rhythmic Stimulations on Gait Variability.

Authors:  Katarzyna Nowakowska-Lipiec; Robert Michnik; Sandra Niedzwiedź; Anna Mańka; Patrycja Twardawa; Bruce Turner; Patrycja Romaniszyn-Kania; Aneta Danecka; Andrzej W Mitas
Journal:  Healthcare (Basel)       Date:  2021-02-06

Review 2.  The Application of P300-Long-Latency Auditory-Evoked Potential in Parkinson Disease.

Authors:  Natalia Ferrazoli; Caroline Donadon; Adriano Rezende; Piotr H Skarzynski; Milaine Dominici Sanfins
Journal:  Int Arch Otorhinolaryngol       Date:  2021-03-29

3.  The sweet spot between predictability and surprise: musical groove in brain, body, and social interactions.

Authors:  Jan Stupacher; Tomas Edward Matthews; Victor Pando-Naude; Olivia Foster Vander Elst; Peter Vuust
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2022-08-09
  3 in total

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