Singh Tarkeshwar, Fridriksson Julius, Perry Christopher M, Tryon Sarah C, Ross Angela, Fritz Stacy, Herter Troy M
Department of Exercise Science, University of South Carolina, Columbia, South Carolina.
Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, University of South Carolina, Columbia, South Carolina; and.
J Neurophysiol. 2017 Jan 1;117(1):79-92. doi: 10.1152/jn.00561.2016. Epub 2016 Oct 12.
Successful execution of many motor skills relies on well-organized visual search (voluntary eye movements that actively scan the environment for task-relevant information). Although impairments of visual search that result from brain injuries are linked to diminished motor performance, the neural processes that guide visual search within this context remain largely unknown. The first objective of this study was to examine how visual search in healthy adults and stroke survivors is used to guide hand movements during the Trail Making Test (TMT), a neuropsychological task that is a strong predictor of visuomotor and cognitive deficits. Our second objective was to develop a novel computational model to investigate combinatorial interactions between three underlying processes of visual search (spatial planning, working memory, and peripheral visual processing). We predicted that stroke survivors would exhibit deficits in integrating the three underlying processes, resulting in deteriorated overall task performance. We found that normal TMT performance is associated with patterns of visual search that primarily rely on spatial planning and/or working memory (but not peripheral visual processing). Our computational model suggested that abnormal TMT performance following stroke is associated with impairments of visual search that are characterized by deficits integrating spatial planning and working memory. This innovative methodology provides a novel framework for studying how the neural processes underlying visual search interact combinatorially to guide motor performance.
NEW & NOTEWORTHY: Visual search has traditionally been studied in cognitive and perceptual paradigms, but little is known about how it contributes to visuomotor performance. We have developed a novel computational model to examine how three underlying processes of visual search (spatial planning, working memory, and peripheral visual processing) contribute to visual search during a visuomotor task. We show that deficits integrating spatial planning and working memory underlie abnormal performance in stroke survivors with frontoparietal damage.
许多运动技能的成功执行依赖于组织良好的视觉搜索(即主动扫描环境以获取与任务相关信息的自主眼球运动)。尽管脑损伤导致的视觉搜索障碍与运动表现下降有关,但在此背景下指导视觉搜索的神经过程仍 largely 未知。本研究的首要目标是考察在连线测验(TMT)期间,健康成年人及中风幸存者的视觉搜索如何用于指导手部运动,TMT 是一项神经心理学任务,是视觉运动和认知缺陷的有力预测指标。我们的第二个目标是开发一种新型计算模型,以研究视觉搜索的三个潜在过程(空间规划、工作记忆和周边视觉处理)之间的组合相互作用。我们预测中风幸存者在整合这三个潜在过程时会表现出缺陷,导致整体任务表现恶化。我们发现正常的 TMT 表现与主要依赖空间规划和/或工作记忆(而非周边视觉处理)的视觉搜索模式相关。我们的计算模型表明,中风后异常的 TMT 表现与视觉搜索障碍有关,其特征是整合空间规划和工作记忆存在缺陷。这种创新方法为研究视觉搜索背后的神经过程如何组合相互作用以指导运动表现提供了一个新框架。
传统上视觉搜索是在认知和感知范式中进行研究的,但对于它如何有助于视觉运动表现知之甚少。我们开发了一种新型计算模型,以考察视觉搜索的三个潜在过程(空间规划、工作记忆和周边视觉处理)在视觉运动任务期间如何促进视觉搜索。我们表明,整合空间规划和工作记忆的缺陷是额顶叶损伤的中风幸存者表现异常的基础。