Allocentric to Egocentric Spatial Switching: Impairment in aMCI and Alzheimer's Disease Patients?

被引:22
|
作者
Ruggiero, Gennaro [1 ]
Iavarone, Alessandro [2 ]
Iachini, Tina [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Campania L Vanvitelli, CS IVR, Dept Psychol, Lab Cognit Sci & Immers Virtual Real, PO 81100, Caserta, Italy
[2] Ospedali Colli, Neurol Unit, Lab Clin Neuropsychol, Naples, Italy
关键词
Egocentric-allocentric representations; aMCI; AD; switching/non-switching abilities; heading disorientation; visuo-spatial memory disorders; MILD COGNITIVE IMPAIRMENT; MINI-MENTAL-STATE; TOPOGRAPHICAL DISORIENTATION; ASSOCIATION WORKGROUPS; DIAGNOSTIC GUIDELINES; NATIONAL INSTITUTE; VIRTUAL-REALITY; NORMATIVE DATA; MEMORY; NAVIGATION;
D O I
10.2174/1567205014666171030114821
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Objective: Deficits in egocentric (subject-to-object) and allocentric (object-to-object) spatial representations, with a mainly allocentric impairment, characterize the first stages of the Alzheimer's disease (AD). Methods: To identify early cognitive signs of AD conversion, some studies focused on amnestic-Mild Cognitive Impairment (aMCI) by reporting alterations in both reference frames, especially the allocentric ones. However, spatial environments in which we move need the cooperation of both reference frames. Such cooperating processes imply that we constantly switch from allocentric to egocentric frames and vice versa. This raises the question of whether alterations of switching abilities might also characterize an early cognitive marker of AD, potentially suitable to detect the conversion from aMCI to dementia. Here, we compared AD and aMCI patients with Normal Controls (NC) on the Ego-AlloSwitching spatial memory task. The task assessed the capacity to use switching (Ego-Allo, Allo-Ego) and non-switching (Ego-Ego, Allo-Allo) verbal judgments about relative distances between memorized stimuli. Results: The novel finding of this study is the neat impairment shown by aMCI and AD in switching from allocentric to egocentric reference frames. Interestingly, in aMCI when the first reference frame was egocentric, the allocentric deficit appeared attenuated. Conclusion: This led us to conclude that allocentric deficits are not always clinically detectable in aMCI since the impairments could be masked when the first reference frame was body-centred. Alongside, AD and aMCI also revealed allocentric deficits in the non-switching condition. These findings suggest that switching alterations would emerge from impairments in hippocampal and posteromedial areas and from concurrent dysregulations in the locus coeruleus-noradrenaline system or pre-frontal cortex.
引用
收藏
页码:229 / 236
页数:8
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