Abstract

Reading deficits are a common early feature of the degenerative syndrome posterior cortical atrophy (PCA) but are poorly understood even at the single word level. The current study evaluated the reading accuracy and speed of 26 PCA patients, 17 typical Alzheimer's disease (tAD) patients and 14 healthy controls on a corpus of 192 single words in which the following perceptual properties were manipulated systematically: inter-letter spacing, font size, length, font type, case and confusability. PCA reading was significantly less accurate and slower than tAD patients and controls, with performance significantly adversely affected by increased letter spacing, size, length and font (cursive < non-cursive), and characterised by visual errors (69% of all error responses). By contrast, tAD and control accuracy rates were at or near ceiling, letter spacing was the only perceptual factor to influence reading speed in the same direction as controls, and, in contrast to PCA patients, control reading was faster for larger font sizes. The inverse size effect in PCA (less accurate reading of large than small font size print) was associated with lower grey matter volume in the right superior parietal lobule. Reading accuracy was associated with impairments of early visual (especially crowding), visuoperceptual and visuospatial processes. However, these deficits were not causally related to a universal impairment of reading as some patients showed preserved reading for small, unspaced words despite grave visual deficits. Rather, the impact of specific types of visual dysfunction on reading was found to be (con)text specific, being particularly evident for large, spaced, lengthy words. These findings improve the characterisation of dyslexia in PCA, shed light on the causative and associative factors, and provide clear direction for the development of reading aids and strategies to maximise and sustain reading ability in the early stages of disease.

Highlights

  • Posterior cortical atrophy (PCA) is a clinico-radiological syndrome characterised by progressive visual impairment and parietal, occipital and occipito-temporal tissue loss

  • Studies of reading in PCA have concentrated on single word reading and have described a number of patterns of dyslexia: neglect dyslexia (Catricala et al, 2011), attentional dyslexia (Saffran & Coslett, 1996), pure alexia (Freedman et al, 1991; Price & Humphreys, 1995) and spatial alexia (Crutch & Warrington, 2007), with PCA patients having difficulty reading cursive script (De Renzi, 1986) and nonwords (Mendez, 2001)

  • The healthy controls were matched to the PCA and typical Alzheimer’s disease (tAD) groups on mean age and years of education, with the PCA and tAD participants matched for mean disease duration and Mini-Mental State Examination score (MMSE; see Table 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Posterior cortical atrophy (PCA) is a clinico-radiological syndrome characterised by progressive visual impairment and parietal, occipital and occipito-temporal tissue loss. Composite scores were generated to include performance on different individual visual processing tasks in data analysis while restricting multicollinearity. The raw scores for the following nuisance variables were transformed into a standardised range for the PCA versus tAD regression analysis: Single letter accuracy, Digit Span (backwards), A Cancellation time (Willison & Warrington, 1992). On tasks without a core visual component, the performance of the PCA group was mostly equivalent to (Concrete Synonyms, Naming, Digit Span forwards) or better than (Short Recognition Memory Test: words) that of the tAD group. PCA patients had lower scores than tAD patients on tests sensitive to parietal dysfunction (Calculation, Digit Span backwards, Cognitive estimates) and on the ‘A’ cancellation task, which is a measure of psychomotor speed involving a prominent visuospatial component. There was no evidence of statistically significant associations between grey matter volume and the other three variables tested (spacing, AoA, frequency) in this group

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