Cargando…

Prominent effects and neural correlates of visual crowding in a neurodegenerative disease population

Crowding is a breakdown in the ability to identify objects in clutter, and is a major constraint on object recognition. Crowding particularly impairs object perception in peripheral, amblyopic and possibly developing vision. Here we argue that crowding is also a critical factor limiting object perce...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Yong, Keir X. X., Shakespeare, Timothy J., Cash, Dave, Henley, Susie M. D., Nicholas, Jennifer M., Ridgway, Gerard R., Golden, Hannah L., Warrington, Elizabeth K., Carton, Amelia M., Kaski, Diego, Schott, Jonathan M., Warren, Jason D., Crutch, Sebastian J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4240300/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25351740
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/brain/awu293
_version_ 1782345706372071424
author Yong, Keir X. X.
Shakespeare, Timothy J.
Cash, Dave
Henley, Susie M. D.
Nicholas, Jennifer M.
Ridgway, Gerard R.
Golden, Hannah L.
Warrington, Elizabeth K.
Carton, Amelia M.
Kaski, Diego
Schott, Jonathan M.
Warren, Jason D.
Crutch, Sebastian J.
author_facet Yong, Keir X. X.
Shakespeare, Timothy J.
Cash, Dave
Henley, Susie M. D.
Nicholas, Jennifer M.
Ridgway, Gerard R.
Golden, Hannah L.
Warrington, Elizabeth K.
Carton, Amelia M.
Kaski, Diego
Schott, Jonathan M.
Warren, Jason D.
Crutch, Sebastian J.
author_sort Yong, Keir X. X.
collection PubMed
description Crowding is a breakdown in the ability to identify objects in clutter, and is a major constraint on object recognition. Crowding particularly impairs object perception in peripheral, amblyopic and possibly developing vision. Here we argue that crowding is also a critical factor limiting object perception in central vision of individuals with neurodegeneration of the occipital cortices. In the current study, individuals with posterior cortical atrophy (n = 26), typical Alzheimer’s disease (n = 17) and healthy control subjects (n = 14) completed centrally-presented tests of letter identification under six different flanking conditions (unflanked, and with letter, shape, number, same polarity and reverse polarity flankers) with two different target-flanker spacings (condensed, spaced). Patients with posterior cortical atrophy were significantly less accurate and slower to identify targets in the condensed than spaced condition even when the target letters were surrounded by flankers of a different category. Importantly, this spacing effect was observed for same, but not reverse, polarity flankers. The difference in accuracy between spaced and condensed stimuli was significantly associated with lower grey matter volume in the right collateral sulcus, in a region lying between the fusiform and lingual gyri. Detailed error analysis also revealed that similarity between the error response and the averaged target and flanker stimuli (but not individual target or flanker stimuli) was a significant predictor of error rate, more consistent with averaging than substitution accounts of crowding. Our findings suggest that crowding in posterior cortical atrophy can be regarded as a pre-attentive process that uses averaging to regularize the pathologically noisy representation of letter feature position in central vision. These results also help to clarify the cortical localization of feature integration components of crowding. More broadly, we suggest that posterior cortical atrophy provides a neurodegenerative disease model for exploring the basis of crowding. These data have significant implications for patients with, or who will go on to develop, dementia-related visual impairment, in whom acquired excessive crowding likely contributes to deficits in word, object, face and scene perception.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-4240300
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2014
publisher Oxford University Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-42403002014-11-21 Prominent effects and neural correlates of visual crowding in a neurodegenerative disease population Yong, Keir X. X. Shakespeare, Timothy J. Cash, Dave Henley, Susie M. D. Nicholas, Jennifer M. Ridgway, Gerard R. Golden, Hannah L. Warrington, Elizabeth K. Carton, Amelia M. Kaski, Diego Schott, Jonathan M. Warren, Jason D. Crutch, Sebastian J. Brain Original Articles Crowding is a breakdown in the ability to identify objects in clutter, and is a major constraint on object recognition. Crowding particularly impairs object perception in peripheral, amblyopic and possibly developing vision. Here we argue that crowding is also a critical factor limiting object perception in central vision of individuals with neurodegeneration of the occipital cortices. In the current study, individuals with posterior cortical atrophy (n = 26), typical Alzheimer’s disease (n = 17) and healthy control subjects (n = 14) completed centrally-presented tests of letter identification under six different flanking conditions (unflanked, and with letter, shape, number, same polarity and reverse polarity flankers) with two different target-flanker spacings (condensed, spaced). Patients with posterior cortical atrophy were significantly less accurate and slower to identify targets in the condensed than spaced condition even when the target letters were surrounded by flankers of a different category. Importantly, this spacing effect was observed for same, but not reverse, polarity flankers. The difference in accuracy between spaced and condensed stimuli was significantly associated with lower grey matter volume in the right collateral sulcus, in a region lying between the fusiform and lingual gyri. Detailed error analysis also revealed that similarity between the error response and the averaged target and flanker stimuli (but not individual target or flanker stimuli) was a significant predictor of error rate, more consistent with averaging than substitution accounts of crowding. Our findings suggest that crowding in posterior cortical atrophy can be regarded as a pre-attentive process that uses averaging to regularize the pathologically noisy representation of letter feature position in central vision. These results also help to clarify the cortical localization of feature integration components of crowding. More broadly, we suggest that posterior cortical atrophy provides a neurodegenerative disease model for exploring the basis of crowding. These data have significant implications for patients with, or who will go on to develop, dementia-related visual impairment, in whom acquired excessive crowding likely contributes to deficits in word, object, face and scene perception. Oxford University Press 2014-12 2014-10-28 /pmc/articles/PMC4240300/ /pubmed/25351740 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/brain/awu293 Text en © The Author (2014). Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Guarantors of Brain. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Articles
Yong, Keir X. X.
Shakespeare, Timothy J.
Cash, Dave
Henley, Susie M. D.
Nicholas, Jennifer M.
Ridgway, Gerard R.
Golden, Hannah L.
Warrington, Elizabeth K.
Carton, Amelia M.
Kaski, Diego
Schott, Jonathan M.
Warren, Jason D.
Crutch, Sebastian J.
Prominent effects and neural correlates of visual crowding in a neurodegenerative disease population
title Prominent effects and neural correlates of visual crowding in a neurodegenerative disease population
title_full Prominent effects and neural correlates of visual crowding in a neurodegenerative disease population
title_fullStr Prominent effects and neural correlates of visual crowding in a neurodegenerative disease population
title_full_unstemmed Prominent effects and neural correlates of visual crowding in a neurodegenerative disease population
title_short Prominent effects and neural correlates of visual crowding in a neurodegenerative disease population
title_sort prominent effects and neural correlates of visual crowding in a neurodegenerative disease population
topic Original Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4240300/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25351740
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/brain/awu293
work_keys_str_mv AT yongkeirxx prominenteffectsandneuralcorrelatesofvisualcrowdinginaneurodegenerativediseasepopulation
AT shakespearetimothyj prominenteffectsandneuralcorrelatesofvisualcrowdinginaneurodegenerativediseasepopulation
AT cashdave prominenteffectsandneuralcorrelatesofvisualcrowdinginaneurodegenerativediseasepopulation
AT henleysusiemd prominenteffectsandneuralcorrelatesofvisualcrowdinginaneurodegenerativediseasepopulation
AT nicholasjenniferm prominenteffectsandneuralcorrelatesofvisualcrowdinginaneurodegenerativediseasepopulation
AT ridgwaygerardr prominenteffectsandneuralcorrelatesofvisualcrowdinginaneurodegenerativediseasepopulation
AT goldenhannahl prominenteffectsandneuralcorrelatesofvisualcrowdinginaneurodegenerativediseasepopulation
AT warringtonelizabethk prominenteffectsandneuralcorrelatesofvisualcrowdinginaneurodegenerativediseasepopulation
AT cartonameliam prominenteffectsandneuralcorrelatesofvisualcrowdinginaneurodegenerativediseasepopulation
AT kaskidiego prominenteffectsandneuralcorrelatesofvisualcrowdinginaneurodegenerativediseasepopulation
AT schottjonathanm prominenteffectsandneuralcorrelatesofvisualcrowdinginaneurodegenerativediseasepopulation
AT warrenjasond prominenteffectsandneuralcorrelatesofvisualcrowdinginaneurodegenerativediseasepopulation
AT crutchsebastianj prominenteffectsandneuralcorrelatesofvisualcrowdinginaneurodegenerativediseasepopulation