Daffner K R, Mesulam M M, Cohen L G, Scinto L F
Brigham Behavioral Neurology Group and Laboratory of Higher Cortical Functions, Division of Cognitive and Behavioral Neurology, Brigham & Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA.
Neuropsychiatry Neuropsychol Behav Neurol. 1999 Jan;12(1):58-66.
To better understand apathy and disengagement in patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD), the authors investigated possible behavioral mechanisms underlying diminished novelty-seeking activity in patients with probable AD.
Apathy and disengagement have been shown to be the most common behavioral changes associated with AD.
Patients and age-matched normal controls had their eye movements recorded while pairs of line drawings pitting an incongruous figure against a congruous figure were shown on a screen for 12 seconds. Characteristics of a subset of AD patients who were indifferent to novel visual stimuli as measured by exploratory eye movements were compared to those of a subset of AD patients who were attracted to novel stimuli to a degree similar to that of normal controls.
The indifferent patients were judged by informants, who completed a personality questionnaire, to exhibit a greater degree of apathy. The two AD groups did not differ in overall dementia severity or performance on a Saccade-to-Target Task that required shifts of attention and gaze. In a separate task, the indifferent patients were able to accurately identify the more novel stimuli in 97.5% of trials. Normal control subjects exhibited a strong bias toward processing novel stimuli, directing a higher proportion of their first fixations and dwell time to the incongruous stimuli whether the analysis was run for 3, 6, or 12 seconds of viewing. Indifferent patients did not direct their initial fixation toward novel stimuli and distributed their looking time evenly between incongruous and congruous stimuli throughout all measured intervals.
The results suggest that the indifference to novelty observed in some patients with probable AD cannot simply be attributed to global cognitive decline, more elementary attentional deficits, more rapid habituation of response to novel stimuli, or an inability to discriminate upon demand between stimuli of varying degrees of novelty. It is more likely that their behavior reflects a disruption, by AD pathology, of neural systems that modulate behavioral engagement and maintain attentional bias toward novel events in the environment.
为了更好地理解阿尔茨海默病(AD)患者的冷漠和脱离状态,作者研究了可能导致可能患有AD的患者寻求新奇活动减少的行为机制。
冷漠和脱离状态已被证明是与AD相关的最常见行为变化。
在屏幕上展示成对的线条画,将不协调的图形与协调的图形进行对比,持续12秒,同时记录患者和年龄匹配的正常对照者的眼球运动。将通过探索性眼球运动测量对新视觉刺激无动于衷的AD患者子集的特征,与对新刺激有吸引力且程度与正常对照者相似的AD患者子集的特征进行比较。
填写了一份人格问卷的 informant 判断,冷漠的患者表现出更高程度的冷漠。两组AD患者在总体痴呆严重程度或需要注意力和注视转移的目标扫视任务中的表现没有差异。在一项单独的任务中,冷漠的患者在97.5%的试验中能够准确识别更新奇的刺激。正常对照受试者对处理新刺激表现出强烈的偏好,无论分析是在观看3秒、6秒还是12秒时进行,他们将更高比例的首次注视和停留时间指向不协调的刺激。冷漠的患者没有将他们最初的注视指向新刺激,并且在所有测量的时间段内,他们在不协调和协调的刺激之间平均分配注视时间。
结果表明,在一些可能患有AD的患者中观察到的对新奇事物的冷漠不能简单地归因于整体认知衰退、更基本的注意力缺陷、对新刺激反应的更快习惯化或无法根据需求区分不同程度新奇的刺激。更有可能的是,他们的行为反映了AD病理对神经系统的破坏,这些神经系统调节行为参与并维持对环境中新奇事件的注意力偏好。