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Eye-tracking indices of impaired encoding of visual short-term memory in familial Alzheimer's disease

Authors :
Sebastian J. Crutch
Nick C. Fox
Jennifer M. Nicholas
Keir X.X. Yong
Yoni Pertzov
Masud Husain
Kirsty Lu
Ivanna M. Pavisic
Antoinette O'Connor
Source :
Scientific reports, Scientific Reports, Vol 11, Iss 1, Pp 1-14 (2021), Scientific Reports
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
NATURE RESEARCH, 2021.

Abstract

The basis of visual short-term memory (VSTM) impairments in preclinical Alzheimer’s disease (AD) remains unclear. Research suggests that eye movements may serve as indirect surrogates to investigate VSTM. Yet, investigations in preclinical populations are lacking. Fifty-two individuals from a familial Alzheimer’s disease (FAD) cohort (9 symptomatic carriers, 17 presymptomatic carriers and 26 controls) completed the “Object-localisation” VSTM task while an eye-tracker recorded eye movements during the stimulus presentation. VSTM function and oculomotor performance were compared between groups and their association during encoding investigated. Compared to controls, symptomatic FAD carriers showed eye movement patterns suggestive of an ineffective encoding and presymptomatic FAD carriers within 6 years of their expected age at symptom onset, were more reliant on the stimuli fixation time to achieve accuracy in the localisation of the target. Consequently, for shorter fixation times on the stimuli, presymptomatic carriers were less accurate at localising the target than controls. By contrast, the only deficits detected on behavioural VSTM function was in symptomatic individuals. Our findings provide novel evidence that encoding processes may be vulnerable and weakened in presymptomatic FAD carriers, most prominently for spatial memory, suggesting a possible explanation for the subtle VSTM impairments observed in the preclinical stages of AD.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Scientific reports, Scientific Reports, Vol 11, Iss 1, Pp 1-14 (2021), Scientific Reports
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e68d3844758358f47fb06dfd871415b9