Abstract

There is growing interest in how social processes and behaviour might be affected in Parkinson’s disease. A task which has been widely used to assess how people orient attention in response to social cues is the spatial cueing task. Socially relevant directional cues, such as a picture of someone gazing or pointing to the left or the right have been shown to cause orienting of visual attention in the cued direction. The basal ganglia may play a role in responding to such directional cues, but no studies to date have examined whether similar social cueing effects are seen in people with Parkinson’s disease. In this study, patients and healthy controls completed a prosaccade (Experiment 1) and an antisaccade task (Experiment 2) in which the target was preceded by arrow, eye gaze or pointing finger cues. Patients showed increased errors and response times for antisaccades but not prosaccades. Healthy participants made most anticipatory errors on pointing finger cue trials, but Parkinson's patients were equally affected by arrow, eye gaze and pointing cues. It is concluded that Parkinson's patients have a reduced ability to suppress responding to directional cues, but this effect is not specific to social cues.

Highlights

  • Parkinson’s disease (PD) is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder with insidious onset (Kalia and Lang 2015)

  • PD is most clearly characterized by a loss of dopaminergic cells in the substantia nigra pars compacta (SNc) (Shulman et al 2011) which send projections to the striatum, which itself is functionally connected with overlying regions of the frontal cerebral cortex via cortico-striatal loops (Alexander and Crutcher 1990)

  • In this paper we describe performance of patients with Parkinson’s disease (PDs) in an eye movement task in which directional cues are presented at fixation, whilst peripheral saccade targets appear to the left or right

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Summary

Introduction

Parkinson’s disease (PD) is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder with insidious onset (Kalia and Lang 2015). Many studies have shown that briefly displaying a picture of a face or eyes looking to the left or right facilitates visuospatial attention and overt saccadic eye movements in the direction in which the eyes in the cue image are gazing This eye gaze cuing effect is found even when participants are instructed to ignore the direction in which the eyes point and when cues are uninformative with respect to the likely direction in which the target object appears (Driver et al 1999; Friesen and Kingstone 1998; Gregory and Hodgson 2012; Koval et al 2005; Kuhn and Benson 2007; Kuhn and Kingstone 2009; Kuhn et al 2009). If social cues relied on different pathways a selective preservation or impairment of the effect of social cues (eyes/pointing) relative to non-socially relevant cues (arrows) might be expected in patients

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