Hokken Marinke J, Van Der Zee Ymie J, Pereira Rob Rodrigues, Rours Ingrid G I J G, Frens Maarten A, van der Steen Johannes, Pel Johan J M, Kooiker Marlou J G
Department of Neuroscience, Erasmus Medical Center, Rotterdam, Netherlands.
Royal Dutch Visio, Huizen, Netherlands.
Front Hum Neurosci. 2024 Dec 24;18:1496796. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2024.1496796. eCollection 2024.
Global Visual Selective Attention (VSA) is the ability to integrate multiple visual elements of a scene to achieve visual overview. This is essential for navigating crowded environments and recognizing objects or faces. Clinical pediatric research on global VSA deficits primarily focuses on autism spectrum disorder (ASD). However, in children with cerebral visual impairment (CVI) and other neurodevelopmental disorders (ADHD, dyslexia) similar deficits are reported. The aim of this study was to investigate global VSA performance in children with CVI, ADHD, dyslexia and neurotypical children by combing gaze-based measures with conventional neuropsychological tasks.
We included children aged 6-12 years with CVI ( = 20), ADHD ( = 30), dyslexia ( = 34) and neurotypical development ( = 37), all with normal verbal IQ. Eye tracking measurements were stepwise introduced within three global VSA tasks: Gestalt Closure (no eye tracking), Navon stimuli (eye tracking-based qualitative analysis) and Kanizsa Illusory Contours (KIC; eye tracking-based quantitative analysis). Verbal responses were compared with non-verbal gaze behavior.
Children with CVI had significantly lower success rates on Gestalt Closure recognition, prolonged verbal response times on Navon stimuli, and decreased verbal and gaze performance on the KIC task compared to all other groups, irrespective of visual acuity. Children with ADHD and dyslexia performed similar to neurotypical children on all tasks.
The results suggest а distinct global VSA deficit in children with CVI, which aligns with clinical observations of symptoms in daily life. Incorporating gaze-based analyses provided new information about search strategies beyond verbal answers and made the KIC task more inclusive for children with language and motor disabilities. Assessing global VSA within clinical CVI assessments could improve the differential diagnostic evaluations among children with CVI, ADHD and dyslexia, leading to more personalized treatment approaches.
全局视觉选择性注意(VSA)是整合场景中多个视觉元素以获得视觉全景的能力。这对于在拥挤环境中导航以及识别物体或面孔至关重要。关于全局VSA缺陷的临床儿科研究主要集中在自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)。然而,在患有脑性视觉障碍(CVI)和其他神经发育障碍(注意力缺陷多动障碍、诵读困难)的儿童中也报告了类似的缺陷。本研究的目的是通过将基于注视的测量方法与传统神经心理学任务相结合,来调查患有CVI、注意力缺陷多动障碍、诵读困难的儿童以及发育正常儿童的全局VSA表现。
我们纳入了年龄在6至12岁之间的患有CVI(n = 20)、注意力缺陷多动障碍(n = 30)、诵读困难(n = 34)和发育正常(n = 37)的儿童,所有儿童的言语智商均正常。在三项全局VSA任务中逐步引入眼动追踪测量:格式塔闭合任务(无眼动追踪)、纳冯刺激任务(基于眼动追踪的定性分析)和卡尼萨错觉轮廓任务(KIC;基于眼动追踪的定量分析)。将言语反应与非言语注视行为进行比较。
与所有其他组相比,患有CVI的儿童在格式塔闭合识别任务上的成功率显著更低,在纳冯刺激任务上的言语反应时间延长,并且在KIC任务上的言语和注视表现下降,无论视力如何。患有注意力缺陷多动障碍和诵读困难的儿童在所有任务上的表现与发育正常的儿童相似。
结果表明患有CVI的儿童存在明显的全局VSA缺陷,这与日常生活中症状的临床观察结果一致。纳入基于注视的分析提供了有关言语答案之外搜索策略的新信息,并使KIC任务对有语言和运动障碍的儿童更具包容性。在临床CVI评估中评估全局VSA可以改善对患有CVI、注意力缺陷多动障碍和诵读困难儿童的鉴别诊断评估,从而带来更个性化的治疗方法。