Abstract

Background The modulation of attention by emotionally arousing stimuli is highly important for each individual's social function. Disturbances of emotional processing are a supportive feature for the diagnosis of subcortical vascular dementia (SVD). We address here whether these disturbances might be useful as an early disease marker. Methods In order to examine the modulation of visual attention by emotionally arousing stimuli of different valence, 12 elderly patients with early SVD, 12 age-comparable healthy adults and 12 young healthy subjects were studied while looking at pairs of pictures from the International Affective Picture Battery that were either neutral–neutral, neutral–positive or neutral–negative in terms of emotional content. Eye movements were recorded with an infrared eye-tracking system. The direction of the first saccade and the dwell time during the 10 s of presentation were measured and compared among groups with parametric tests. Results All subjects showed a modulation of initial attentional orienting as well as a higher percentage of dwell time towards the pictures containing emotional material. Patients with SVD and old controls did not differ in either experimental measure. Young patients showed a stronger bias towards emotionally negative material than both groups of older individuals. Conclusions Modulation of visuospatial attention is preserved in early SVD. This might have implications for therapeutic interventional approaches. A weakened sustained attention towards negative but not positive emotional pictures in the elderly is in accordance with the socioemotional selectivity theory, describing a relative selection of positive stimuli with aging.

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