| Literature DB >> 31861974 |
Kathryn L McCabe1,2, Abbie M Popa3, Courtney Durdle3, Michele Amato3, Margarita H Cabaral3, Joshua Cruz3, Ling M Wong3,4, Danielle Harvey5, Nicole Tartaglia6, Tony J Simon3,4.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Our ability to generate mental representation of magnitude from sensory information affects how we perceive and experience the world. Reduced resolution of the mental representations formed from sensory inputs may generate impairment in the proximal and distal information processes that utilize these representations. Impairment of spatial and temporal information processing likely underpins the non-verbal cognitive impairments observed in 22q11.2 deletion syndrome (22q11DS). The present study builds on prior research by seeking to quantify the resolution of spatial and temporal representation in children with 22q11DS, sex chromosome aneuploidy (SCA), and a typically developing (TD) control group. PARTICIPANTS AND METHODS: Children (22q11DS = 70, SCA = 49, TD = 46) responded to visual or auditory stimuli with varying difference ratios. The participant's task was to identify which of two sequentially presented stimuli was of larger magnitude in terms of, size, duration, or auditory frequency. Detection threshold was calculated as the minimum difference ratio between the "standard" and the "target" stimuli required to achieve 75% accuracy in detecting that the two stimuli were different.Entities:
Keywords: 22q11.2 deletion syndrome (22q11DS); Attention; Children; Magnitude processing; Spatiotemporal attention
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31861974 PMCID: PMC6925465 DOI: 10.1186/s11689-019-9301-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurodev Disord ISSN: 1866-1947 Impact factor: 4.025
Participant Characteristics
| 22q11DS | TD | SCA | |
|---|---|---|---|
| ( | ( | ( | |
| Age (years) | |||
| Mean (SD) | 11.3 (2.4) | 10.6 (2.2) | 11.1 (2.2) |
| Range (years) | 7.7–15 | 7–15.1 | 7.2–15.3 |
| Gender | |||
| % Female | 43 | 51 | 41 |
| IQ | |||
| FSIQ | 73.33 (13.44) | 114.05 (14.24) | 94.98 (14.22)**a,b,c |
| VIQ | 78.91 (13.78) | 115.86 (14.73) | 95.87 (13.82) |
| PIQ | 76.73 (13.65) | 109.51 (12.38) | 103.00 (22.48) |
*p value < 0.01; **p value < 0.001; a22q11DS < SCA; bSCA < TD; c22q11DS < TD
Group means and standard deviations (SD) for detection threshold for the AMC, TDJ-V, TDJ-A, and APC tasks
| Task | Detection threshold | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Mean | Range | ||
| AMC | |||
| 22q11DS | 60 | 14 (12.4) | 2–48c** |
| TD | 49 | 7 (5.2) | 2–27 |
| SCA | 43 | 8 (6.5) | 2–28 |
| TDJ-V | |||
| 22q11DS | 36 | 31 (10.5) | 12–49c** |
| TD | 30 | 17 (15.4) | 1–46 |
| SCA | 23 | 22 (13.8) | 1–49 |
| TDJ-A | |||
| 22q11DS | 40 | 23 (18.3) | 1–50c** |
| TD | 30 | 8 (10.2) | 1–42 |
| SCA | 27 | 12 (13.9) | 1–50 |
| APC | |||
| 22q11DS | 59 | 21 (11.5) | 11–50NS |
| TD | 44 | 20 (11.3) | 11–46 |
| SCA | 42 | 18 (8.9) | 11–38 |
*p value < 0.01; **p value < 0.001; a22q11DS < SCA; bSCA < TD; c22q11DS < TD; NS, not significant
Fig. 1Group means and standard deviations (SD) for detection threshold for the AMC, TDJ-V, TDJ-A, and APC tasks. *p < 0001
Correlations between measures of magnitude comparison and IQ
| 22q | TD | SCA | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| FSIQ | VIQ | PIQ | FSIQ | VIQ | PIQ | FSIQ | VIQ | PIQ | |
| AMC | 0.16 (0.27) | 0.15 (0.31) | 0.39 (0.007) | 0.65 (0.001) | 0.61 (0.001) | 0.48 (0.001) | − 0.02 (0.9) | − 0.05 (0.77) | 0.06 (0.74) |
| APC | 0.38 (0.01) | 0.39 (0.01) | 0.38 (0.01) | 0.4 (0.01) | 0.30 (0.06) | 0.39 (0.01) | 0.03 (0.85) | − 0.13 (0.44) | − 0.10 (0.56) |
| TDJ-A | 0.3 (0.10) | 0.29 (0.11) | 0.58 (0.001) | 0.28 (0.16) | 0.17 (0.4) | 0.31 (0.12) | 0.41 (0.07) | 0.4 (0.08) | 0.15 (0.53) |
| TDJ-V | 0.45 (0.02) | 0.41 (0.04) | 0.28 (0.15) | 0.25 (0.20) | 0.27 (0.17) | 0.15 (0.44) | − 0.03 (0.92) | − 0.02 (0.93) | − 0.22 (0.4) |
Nb, To aid interpretation of the data—for all measures, data have been reversed so that positive correlations indicate that lower detection threshold is associated with higher IQ