Abstract

Cognitive assessment in a clinical setting is generally made by pencil-and-paper tests, while computer-based tests enable the measurement and the extraction of additional performance indexes. Previous studies have demonstrated that in a research context exploration deficits occur also in patients without evidence of unilateral neglect at pencil-and-paper tests. The objective of this study is to apply a touchscreen-based cancellation test, feasible also in a clinical context, to large groups of control subjects and unilaterally brain-damaged patients, with and without unilateral spatial neglect (USN), in order to assess disturbances of the exploratory skills. A computerized cancellation test on a touchscreen interface was used for assessing the performance of 119 neurologically unimpaired control subjects and 193 patients with unilateral right or left hemispheric brain damage, either with or without USN. A set of performance indexes were defined including Latency, Proximity, Crossings and their spatial lateral gradients, and Preferred Search Direction. Classic outcome scores were computed as well. Results show statistically significant differences among groups (assumed p<0.05). Right-brain-damaged patients with USN were significantly slower (median latency per detected item was 1.18 s) and less efficient (about 13 search-path crossings) in the search than controls (median latency 0.64 s; about 3 crossings). Their preferred search direction (53.6% downward, 36.7% leftward) was different from the one in control patients (88.2% downward, 2.1% leftward). Right-brain-damaged patients without USN showed a significantly abnormal behavior (median latency 0.84 s, about 5 crossings, 83.3% downward and 9.1% leftward direction) situated half way between controls and right-brain-damaged patients with USN. Left-brain-damaged patients without USN were significantly slower and less efficient than controls (latency 1.19 s, about 7 crossings), preserving a normal preferred search direction (93.7% downward). Therefore, the proposed touchscreen-based assessment had evidenced disorders in spatial exploration also in patients without clinically diagnosed USN.

Highlights

  • Unilateral spatial neglect (USN) is a neuropsychological disorder whereby brain-damaged patients fail to report events occurring on the space side that is usually contralateral to the side of a unilateral lesion

  • While the justifications for keeping LI and NC were based on the their comparability with previously defined indexes and because of the clarity of their definition, PI was preferred to DI because only the former one showed a significant difference among groups

  • The considered indexes set after the data reduction step included the scores neglect score (NS), numbers concerning undetected targets (NT), number of cancelled distractors (ND), NP, the performance indexes LI, Latency Gradient (LG), PI, Proximity Gradient (PG), NC and the direction indexes XC and YC

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Summary

Introduction

Unilateral spatial neglect (USN) is a neuropsychological disorder whereby brain-damaged patients fail to report events occurring on the space side that is usually contralateral to the side of a unilateral lesion. These patients fail to explore that space side. Targets may or may not be interspersed with distracters. These tests include line [4], circle [5], letter [6], star [7], bell [8] and symbol [9] cancellation

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