| Literature DB >> 31375642 |
Thomas D W Wilcockson1,2, Diako Mardanbegi3, Baiqiang Xia4, Simon Taylor5, Pete Sawyer6, Hans W Gellersen3, Ira Leroi7,8,9, Rebecca Killick5, Trevor J Crawford2.
Abstract
Background: There is increasing evidence that people in the early stages of Alzheimer's disease (AD) have subtle impairments in cognitive inhibition that can be detected by using relatively simple eye-tracking paradigms, but these subtle impairments are often missed by traditional cognitive assessments. People with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) are at an increased likelihood of dementia due to AD. No study has yet investigated and contrasted the MCI subtypes in relation to eye movement performance.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; anti-saccade; eye tracking; inhibitory control; mild cognitive impairment
Year: 2019 PMID: 31375642 PMCID: PMC6710064 DOI: 10.18632/aging.102118
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Aging (Albany NY) ISSN: 1945-4589 Impact factor: 5.682
Figure 1The eye movement variables for the Alzheimer's disease (AD), amnesic Mild Cognitive Impairment (aMCI), non-amnesic Mild Cognitive Impairment (naMCI), and control participants (CP). (A) Antisaccade latencies (left panel); (B) Antisaccade uncorrected errors (right panel).
Figure 2Heatmap plots of the extracted gaze signals in each of participant groups. The x-axis indicates the time since saccadic target appearance, and the y-axis presents the aligned horizontal gaze position. The warmer the colour; the higher is the gaze point density in the corresponding spatial-temporal location. Note that the longest "comet" tails, reflecting a high proportion of uncorrected errors, are evident for the Alzheimer's (AD) and the amnesic Mild Cognitive Impairment (aMCI) groups. The control participants (CP) and the non- amnesic MCI have distinctly shorter "comet" tails.
Log-odds coefficient estimates for cognitive groups from the weighted logistic regression model for the proportion of uncorrected AST errors.
| Group | Log-odds | SE | 95% Confidence Interval | Wald | |
| Lower | Upper | Chi-Square | |||
| All participants (N=249), dispersion = 5.361 | |||||
| AD | -1.242 | 0.1389 | -1.515 | -0.970 | 79.973 |
| aMCI | -1.063 | 0.1699 | -1.396 | -0.730 | 39.192 |
| naMCI | -1.974 | 0.2038 | -2.373 | -1.574 | 93.782 |
| CP | -2.176 | 0.1670 | -2.503 | -1.848 | 169.688 |
| Age matched (N=211), dispersion = 5.645 | |||||
| AD | -1.226 | 0.1453 | -1.511 | -0.941 | 71.218 |
| aMCI | -1.107 | 0.1827 | -1.466 | -0.749 | 36.742 |
| naMCI | -1.959 | 0.2317 | -2.413 | -1.505 | 71.487 |
| CP | -2.266 | 0.2066 | -2.371 | -1.861 | 120.267 |
All chi-squared Wald statistics are based on 1 degree of freedom and all correspond to p-values less than 0.0005.
Descriptive statistics (SD) of participants including cognitive assessment (MoCA) scores for each group.
| Dementia due to AD | Amnesic mild cognitive impairment | Non-amnesic mild cognitive impairment | Control participants | ||
| Age | 74 (7.7) | 74 (7.4) | 69(6.9) | 69 (7.2) | <.0005 |
| Sex (% male) | 50% | 41% | 57% | 43% | .297 ns |
| MoCA total score | 20 (5.7) | 21(4.5) | 25 (2.2) | 28 (1.8) | <.0005 |
| FCSRT – Free Recall | 17.32 (12.0) | 18.7 (7.7) | 32.3 (4.2) | 36.1 (5.7) | <.0005 |
| FCSRT - Total | 36.2 (14.8) | 45.1 (4.4) | 47.4 (1.3) | 47.8 (0.8) | <.0005 |
| Digit span total | 15.6 (4.1) | 16.4 (3.7) | 16.7 (4.8) | 18.7 (4.5) | <.0005 |
| Spatial span total | 11.3 (3.1) | 12.6 (3.1) | 13.0 (2.6) | 14.6 (2.8) | <.0005 |
MoCA - Montreal Cognitive Assessment [25]; Free cued selective reminding task free recall and total score [26]; digit span and spatial span [27,28].
Figure 3A diagrammatical representation of an antisaccade trial. The thick black line demonstrates the location of the distractor. The red line demonstrates the eye incorrectly moving toward the distractor. The green line demonstrates a correct antisaccade away from the distractor.