Riffo Bernardo, Guerra Ernesto, Rojas Carlos, Novoa Abraham, Veliz Mónica
Department of Spanish, University of Concepción, Concepción, Chile.
Center for Advanced Research in Education, Institute of Education (IE), Universidad de Chile, Santiago, Chile.
J Psycholinguist Res. 2020 Oct;49(5):823-836. doi: 10.1007/s10936-020-09718-3.
The association between a word and typical location (e.g., cloud-up) appears to modulate healthy individuals' response times and visual attention. This study examined whether similar effects can be observed in a clinical population characterized by difficulties in both spatial representation and lexical processing. In an eye-tracking experiment, participants categorized spoken words as either up-associated or down-associated. Parkinson's disease patients exhibited a tendency to maintain their visual attention in the upper half of the screen, however, this tendency was significantly lower when participants categorized concepts as down-associated. Instead, the control group showed no preference for either the upper or lower half of the screen. We argue that Parkinson's disease patients present an over-reliance on space during word categorization as a form of cognitive compensation. Such compensation reveals that this clinical population may use spatial anchoring when categorizing words with a spatial association, even in the absence of explicit spatial cues.
一个单词与典型位置(如“向上的云”)之间的关联似乎会调节健康个体的反应时间和视觉注意力。本研究考察了在一个以空间表征和词汇处理都存在困难为特征的临床群体中是否能观察到类似的效应。在一项眼动追踪实验中,参与者将口语单词分类为与向上相关或与向下相关。帕金森病患者表现出将视觉注意力保持在屏幕上半部分的倾向,然而,当参与者将概念分类为与向下相关时,这种倾向明显降低。相反,对照组对屏幕的上半部分或下半部分没有偏好。我们认为,帕金森病患者在单词分类过程中过度依赖空间,这是一种认知补偿形式。这种补偿表明,即使在没有明确空间线索的情况下,这个临床群体在对具有空间关联的单词进行分类时可能会使用空间锚定。