Neuroscience, Systems and Cognition (NEUROCS) Research Unit, Institute of Psychology, Catholic University of Louvain, Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium.
Cortex. 2013 Jun;49(6):1610-26. doi: 10.1016/j.cortex.2012.04.012. Epub 2012 May 8.
Crossmodality (i.e., the integration of stimulations coming from different sensory modalities) is a crucial ability in everyday life and has been extensively explored in healthy adults. Still, it has not yet received much attention in psychiatry, and particularly in alcohol-dependence. The present study investigates the cerebral correlates of crossmodal integration deficits in alcohol-dependence to assess whether these deficits are due to the mere accumulation of unimodal impairments or rather to specific alterations in crossmodal areas.
Twenty-eight subjects [14 alcohol-dependent subjects (ADS), 14 paired controls] were scanned using fMRI while performing a categorization task on faces (F), voices (V) and face-voice pairs (FV). A subtraction contrast [FV-(F+V)] and a conjunction analysis [(FV-F) ∩ (FV-V)] isolated the brain areas specifically involved in crossmodal face-voice integration. The functional connectivity between unimodal and crossmodal areas was explored using psycho-physiological interactions (PPI).
ADS presented only moderate alterations during unimodal processing. More centrally, in the subtraction contrast and conjunction analysis, they did not show any specific crossmodal brain activation while controls presented activations in specific crossmodal areas (inferior occipital gyrus, middle frontal gyrus, superior parietal lobule). Moreover, PPI analyses showed reduced connectivity between unimodal and crossmodal areas in alcohol-dependence.
This first fMRI exploration of crossmodal processing in alcohol-dependence showed a specific face-voice integration deficit indexed by reduced activation of crossmodal areas and reduced connectivity in the crossmodal integration network. Using crossmodal paradigms is thus crucial to correctly evaluate the deficits presented by ADS in real-life situations.
跨模态(即整合来自不同感觉模态的刺激)是日常生活中的一项重要能力,已在健康成年人中得到广泛研究。然而,在精神病学中,特别是在酒精依赖中,它还没有受到太多关注。本研究调查了酒精依赖者跨模态整合缺陷的大脑相关性,以评估这些缺陷是仅仅由于单一模态损伤的累积,还是由于跨模态区域的特定改变所致。
28 名受试者[14 名酒精依赖受试者(ADS),14 名配对对照组]在执行面孔(F)、声音(V)和面孔-声音对(FV)分类任务时使用 fMRI 进行扫描。使用减法对比[FV-(F+V)]和联合分析[(FV-F)∩(FV-V)]来分离专门参与跨模态面孔-声音整合的大脑区域。使用心理生理相互作用(PPI)探索单一模态和跨模态区域之间的功能连接。
ADS 在单一模态处理过程中仅表现出中度改变。更集中的是,在减法对比和联合分析中,他们没有表现出任何特定的跨模态大脑激活,而对照组在特定的跨模态区域(枕下回、额中回、顶下小叶)表现出激活。此外,PPI 分析显示酒精依赖症患者的单一模态和跨模态区域之间的连接减少。
这是首次对酒精依赖者的跨模态处理进行的 fMRI 探索,显示出特定的面孔-声音整合缺陷,表现为跨模态区域的激活减少和跨模态整合网络的连接减少。因此,使用跨模态范式对于正确评估 ADS 在现实生活情境中表现出的缺陷至关重要。