Latgé-Tovar Sofia, Bertrand Elodie, Piolino Pascale, Mograbi Daniel C
Institute of Psychiatry - Center for Alzheimer's Disease, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
Laboratoire Mémoire, Cerveau et Cognition (LMC2), Institut de Psychologie, Université Paris Cité, Paris, France.
Front Aging Neurosci. 2024 Apr 25;16:1376413. doi: 10.3389/fnagi.2024.1376413. eCollection 2024.
Lack of awareness of symptoms or having a condition referred to as anosognosia is a common feature of individuals with Alzheimer's Disease (AD). Previous literature on AD reported difficulties in evaluating self-abilities, often showing underestimation of limitations. There is increasing evidence that the perspective through which information is presented may moderate the performance appraisal and that anosognosia in AD might be a consequence of a deficit in assuming a third-person perspective. In this context, some studies showed that subjects may better recognize self-and other-difficulties when exposed to a third-person perspective. Considering the variety of approaches aiming to investigate the lack of awareness, there is still a scarcity of methods that provide great ecological validity and consider more than one facet of awareness, thus failing to offer more accurate evaluations of daily experiences. The present paper primarily addresses the theme of the multidimensional character of awareness of abilities in AD and the effect of perspective-taking on its trajectories. The focus turns to virtual reality as a promising tool for a greater evaluation of perspective-taking and self-awareness. Particularly, these systems offer the possibility to involve users in cognitive and sensorimotor tasks that simulate daily life conditions within immersive and realistic environments, and a great sense of embodiment. We propose that virtual reality might allow a great level of complexity, veracity, and safety that is needed for individuals with AD to behave according to their actual abilities and enable to explore the liaison between the subject's viewpoint, performance, and self-evaluation. In addition, we suggest promising clinical implications of virtual reality-based methods for individualized assessments, investigating specific impacts on subjects' life and possible improvements in their awareness.
对症状缺乏认知或存在被称为疾病感缺失的情况是阿尔茨海默病(AD)患者的常见特征。以往关于AD的文献报道了评估自我能力存在困难,往往表现出对自身局限性的低估。越来越多的证据表明,信息呈现的视角可能会影响绩效评估,并且AD中的疾病感缺失可能是难以从第三人称视角看待问题的结果。在这种背景下,一些研究表明,当从第三人称视角看待问题时,受试者可能会更好地认识到自己和他人的困难。考虑到旨在研究认知缺失的方法多种多样,但仍然缺乏具有高度生态效度且能考虑认知多个方面的方法,因此无法对日常经历进行更准确的评估。本文主要探讨AD中能力认知的多维度特征这一主题以及视角采择对其轨迹的影响。重点转向虚拟现实,它有望成为一种用于更好地评估视角采择和自我认知的工具。特别是,这些系统提供了让用户参与认知和感觉运动任务的可能性,这些任务在沉浸式和逼真的环境中模拟日常生活条件,并且具有很强的身临其境感。我们认为虚拟现实可能具有AD患者根据自身实际能力行事所需的高度复杂性、真实性和安全性,并能够探索受试者的观点、表现和自我评估之间的联系。此外,我们提出基于虚拟现实的方法在个性化评估方面具有潜在的临床意义,可用于研究对受试者生活的具体影响以及他们认知方面可能的改善。