Spatial compression impairs prism adaptation in healthy individuals

Neglect patients typically present with gross inattention to one side of space following damage to the contralateral hemisphere. While prism-adaptation (PA) is effective in ameliorating some neglect behaviors, the mechanisms involved and their relationship to neglect remain unclear. Recent studies h...

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Main Authors: Scriven, Rachel J., Newport, Roger
Format: Article
Published: Frontiers 2013
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/2769/
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author Scriven, Rachel J.
Newport, Roger
author_facet Scriven, Rachel J.
Newport, Roger
author_sort Scriven, Rachel J.
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Neglect patients typically present with gross inattention to one side of space following damage to the contralateral hemisphere. While prism-adaptation (PA) is effective in ameliorating some neglect behaviors, the mechanisms involved and their relationship to neglect remain unclear. Recent studies have shown that conscious strategic control (SC) processes in PA may be impaired in neglect patients, who are also reported to show extraordinarily long aftereffects compared to healthy participants. Determining the underlying cause of these effects may be the key to understanding therapeutic benefits. Alternative accounts suggest that reduced SC might result from a failure to detect prism-induced reaching errors properly either because (a) the size of the error is underestimated in compressed visual space or (b) pathologically increased error-detection thresholds reduce the requirement for error correction. The purpose of this study was to model these two alternatives in healthy participants and to examine whether SC and subsequent aftereffects were abnormal compared to standard PA. Each participant completed three PA procedures within a MIRAGE mediated reality environment with direction errors recorded before, during and after adaptation. During PA, visual feedback of the reach could be compressed, perturbed by noise, or represented veridically. Compressed visual space significantly reduced SC and aftereffects compared to control and noise conditions. These results support recent observations in neglect patients, suggesting that a distortion of spatial representation may successfully model neglect and explain neglect performance while adapting to prisms.
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spelling nottingham-27692020-05-04T16:37:02Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/2769/ Spatial compression impairs prism adaptation in healthy individuals Scriven, Rachel J. Newport, Roger Neglect patients typically present with gross inattention to one side of space following damage to the contralateral hemisphere. While prism-adaptation (PA) is effective in ameliorating some neglect behaviors, the mechanisms involved and their relationship to neglect remain unclear. Recent studies have shown that conscious strategic control (SC) processes in PA may be impaired in neglect patients, who are also reported to show extraordinarily long aftereffects compared to healthy participants. Determining the underlying cause of these effects may be the key to understanding therapeutic benefits. Alternative accounts suggest that reduced SC might result from a failure to detect prism-induced reaching errors properly either because (a) the size of the error is underestimated in compressed visual space or (b) pathologically increased error-detection thresholds reduce the requirement for error correction. The purpose of this study was to model these two alternatives in healthy participants and to examine whether SC and subsequent aftereffects were abnormal compared to standard PA. Each participant completed three PA procedures within a MIRAGE mediated reality environment with direction errors recorded before, during and after adaptation. During PA, visual feedback of the reach could be compressed, perturbed by noise, or represented veridically. Compressed visual space significantly reduced SC and aftereffects compared to control and noise conditions. These results support recent observations in neglect patients, suggesting that a distortion of spatial representation may successfully model neglect and explain neglect performance while adapting to prisms. Frontiers 2013-05-07 Article PeerReviewed Scriven, Rachel J. and Newport, Roger (2013) Spatial compression impairs prism adaptation in healthy individuals. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, 7 . 165/1-165/8. ISSN 1662-5161 http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnhum.2013.00165/abstrac doi:10.3389/fnhum.2013.00165 doi:10.3389/fnhum.2013.00165
spellingShingle Scriven, Rachel J.
Newport, Roger
Spatial compression impairs prism adaptation in healthy individuals
title Spatial compression impairs prism adaptation in healthy individuals
title_full Spatial compression impairs prism adaptation in healthy individuals
title_fullStr Spatial compression impairs prism adaptation in healthy individuals
title_full_unstemmed Spatial compression impairs prism adaptation in healthy individuals
title_short Spatial compression impairs prism adaptation in healthy individuals
title_sort spatial compression impairs prism adaptation in healthy individuals
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/2769/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/2769/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/2769/