SCALab, University of Lille, CNRS, France.
LAPCOS, University of Nice Sophia Antipolis, Nice, France.
Cortex. 2018 Oct;107:4-12. doi: 10.1016/j.cortex.2018.06.002. Epub 2018 Jun 20.
Object/background association is critical to understand the context of visual scenes but also in daily life tasks like object search. Patients with Alzheimer disease (AD) exhibit impairment in scene processing at different levels: perception, recognition, memory and spatial navigation. We explored whether patients with AD make use of contextual information in congruent and incongruent target/background conditions in three different saccadic choice tasks.
We recruited 36 participants (12 young, 12 patients with AD at a moderate stage and 12 age-matched controls). Pairs of scenes (one congruent and one incongruent object/background) were displayed. In a free viewing task we recorded whether the participants spontaneously direct their gaze (eye tracker recordings) toward the congruent or the incongruent scene. In a task referred as "implicit", the participants had to saccade toward a pre-defined target (animal or piece of furniture) in a scene (congruent or not with the target). In a task, called "explicit", participants had to saccade towards the congruent scene.
In contrast with both young and older controls patients with AD showed difficulties to refrain a first saccade toward incongruent scenes in the free viewing and the implicit tasks. They were at chance level in the explicit task. When given time to explore the two scenes, in a manual response condition, they were able to accomplish the implicit and explicit tasks with good accuracy.
In contrast to healthy controls patients with AD exhibited a strong, significant, bias towards incongruent object/background scenes, even in the free viewing task, suggesting that unfamiliar or deviant stimuli attract their attention spontaneously. This result is in line with studies showing impairments in filtering out irrelevant distractors in visual search tasks and with studies suggesting inefficient top-down control to select relevant information at early stage of the disease.
物体/背景关联对于理解视觉场景的上下文至关重要,但在日常生活任务中,如物体搜索,也同样重要。阿尔茨海默病(AD)患者在场景处理的不同水平上表现出损伤:感知、识别、记忆和空间导航。我们探讨了 AD 患者在三种不同的眼跳选择任务中,是否在目标/背景的一致和不一致条件下利用上下文信息。
我们招募了 36 名参与者(12 名年轻人、12 名处于中度阶段的 AD 患者和 12 名年龄匹配的对照组)。显示了一对场景(一个一致的和一个不一致的物体/背景)。在自由观看任务中,我们记录了参与者是否自发地将目光(眼动追踪记录)投向一致或不一致的场景。在一项称为“内隐”的任务中,参与者必须在一个场景(与目标一致或不一致)中向一个预先定义的目标(动物或家具)进行眼跳。在一项称为“外显”的任务中,参与者必须向一致的场景进行眼跳。
与年轻和老年对照组相比,AD 患者在自由观看和内隐任务中,在抑制对不一致场景的第一眼跳方面表现出困难。他们在明确任务中处于随机水平。当给予时间探索两个场景时,在手动响应条件下,他们能够以良好的准确性完成内隐和外显任务。
与健康对照组相比,AD 患者表现出强烈的、显著的、对不一致的物体/背景场景的偏向,甚至在自由观看任务中也是如此,这表明不熟悉或异常的刺激会自发地吸引他们的注意力。这一结果与表明在视觉搜索任务中过滤无关干扰的研究一致,也与表明在疾病早期选择相关信息的效率低下的自上而下控制的研究一致。