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Dissociation of Neural Mechanisms for Intersensory Timing Deficits in Parkinson's Disease.

Authors :
Harrington, Deborah L.
Castillo, Gabriel N.
Reed, Jason D.
Song, David D.
Litvan, Irene
Lee, Roland R.
Source :
Timing & Time Perception. 7/1/2014, Vol. 2 Issue 2, p145-168. 24p.
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

This study investigated the ability of individuals with Parkinson's disease (PD) to synthesize temporal information across the senses, namely audition and vision. Auditory signals (A) are perceived as lasting longer than visual signals (V) when they are compared together, since attention is captured and sustained more easily than for visual information. We used the audiovisual illusion to probe for disturbances in brain networks that govern the resolution of time in two intersensory conditions that putatively differ in their attention demands. PD patients and controls judged the relative duration of successively presented pairs of unimodal (AA, VV) and crossmodal (VA, AV) signals whilst undergoing fMRI. There were four main findings. First, underestimation of time was exaggerated in PD when timing depended on controlled attention (AV), where as subtle deficits were found when audition dominated and attention was more easily sustained (VA). Second, group differences in regional activation were observed only for the AV-unimodal comparison, where the PD group failed tomodulate basal ganglia, anterior insula, and inferior cerebellum activity in accord with the timing condition. Third, the intersensory timing conditions were dissociated by patterns of abnormal functional connectivity. When intersensory timing emphasized controlled attention, patients showed weakened connectivity of the cortico-thalamus-basal ganglia (CTBG) circuit and the anterior insula with widespread cortical regions, yet enhanced cerebellar connectivity. When audition dominated intersensory timing, patients showed enhanced connectivity of CTBG elements, the anterior insula, and the cerebellum with the caudate tail and frontal cortex. Fourth, abnormal connectivity measures showed excellent sensitivity and specificity in accurately classifying subjects. The results demonstrate that intersensory timing deficits in PD were well characterized by context-dependent patterns of functional connectivity within a presumed core timing system(CTBG) and a ventral attention hub (anterior insula), and enhanced cerebellar connectivity irrespective of the hypothesized attention demands of timing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2213445X
Volume :
2
Issue :
2
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Timing & Time Perception
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
101022486
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1163/22134468-00002025