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Patients with lesions to the intraparietal cortex show greater proprioceptive realignment after prism adaptation: Evidence from open-loop pointing and manual straight ahead.

Authors :
Bultitude, Janet H.
Hollifield, Michael
Rafal, Robert D.
Source :
Neuropsychologia. Jul2021, Vol. 158, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Reaching toward a target viewed through laterally refracting prisms results in adaptation of both visual and (limb) proprioceptive spatial representations. Common ways to measure adaptation after-effect are to ask a person to point straight ahead with their eyes closed ("manual straight ahead", MSA), or to a seen target using their unseen hand ("open-loop pointing", OLP). MSA measures changes in proprioception only, whereas OLP measures the combined visual and proprioceptive shift. The behavioural and neurological mechanisms of prism adaptation have come under scrutiny following reports of reduced hemispatial neglect in patients following this procedure. We present evidence suggesting that shifts in proprioceptive spatial representations induced by prism adaptation are larger following lesions to the intraparietal cortex – a brain region that integrates retinotopic visual signals with signals of eye position in the orbit and that is activated during prism adaptation. Six healthy participants and six patients with unilateral intraparietal cortex lesions underwent prism adaptation. After-effects were measured with OLP and MSA. After-effects of control participants were larger when measured with OLP than with MSA, consistent with previous research and with the additional contribution of visual shift to OLP after-effects. However, patients' OLP shifts were not significantly different to their MSA shifts. We conclude that, for the patients, correction of pointing errors during prism adaptation involved proportionally more changes to arm proprioception than for controls. Since lesions to intraparietal cortex led to enhanced realignment of arm proprioceptive representations, our results indirectly suggest that the intraparietal cortex could be key for visual realignment. • Prism adaptation shifted controls' open-loop pointing more than manual straight ahead. • Manual straight ahead shifted more in people with intraparietal cortex lesions than controls. • Shifts in open-loop pointing for the two groups were not different. • Results indicate greater proprioceptive realignment following intraparietal cortex damage. • This could also be indirect evidence of reduced visual realignment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00283932
Volume :
158
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Neuropsychologia
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
151307065
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2021.107913