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Top-Down but Not Bottom-Up Visual Scanning is Affected in Hereditary Pure Cerebellar Ataxia

The aim of this study was to clarify the nature of visual processing deficits caused by cerebellar disorders. We studied the performance of two types of visual search (top-down visual scanning and bottom-up visual scanning) in 18 patients with pure cerebellar types of spinocerebellar degeneration (S...

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Autores principales: Matsuda, Shunichi, Matsumoto, Hideyuki, Furubayashi, Toshiaki, Fukuda, Hideki, Emoto, Masaki, Hanajima, Ritsuko, Tsuji, Shoji, Ugawa, Yoshikazu, Terao, Yasuo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4278854/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25545148
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0116181
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author Matsuda, Shunichi
Matsumoto, Hideyuki
Furubayashi, Toshiaki
Fukuda, Hideki
Emoto, Masaki
Hanajima, Ritsuko
Tsuji, Shoji
Ugawa, Yoshikazu
Terao, Yasuo
author_facet Matsuda, Shunichi
Matsumoto, Hideyuki
Furubayashi, Toshiaki
Fukuda, Hideki
Emoto, Masaki
Hanajima, Ritsuko
Tsuji, Shoji
Ugawa, Yoshikazu
Terao, Yasuo
author_sort Matsuda, Shunichi
collection PubMed
description The aim of this study was to clarify the nature of visual processing deficits caused by cerebellar disorders. We studied the performance of two types of visual search (top-down visual scanning and bottom-up visual scanning) in 18 patients with pure cerebellar types of spinocerebellar degeneration (SCA6: 11; SCA31: 7). The gaze fixation position was recorded with an eye-tracking device while the subjects performed two visual search tasks in which they looked for a target Landolt figure among distractors. In the serial search task, the target was similar to the distractors and the subject had to search for the target by processing each item with top-down visual scanning. In the pop-out search task, the target and distractor were clearly discernible and the visual salience of the target allowed the subjects to detect it by bottom-up visual scanning. The saliency maps clearly showed that the serial search task required top-down visual attention and the pop-out search task required bottom-up visual attention. In the serial search task, the search time to detect the target was significantly longer in SCA patients than in normal subjects, whereas the search time in the pop-out search task was comparable between the two groups. These findings suggested that SCA patients cannot efficiently scan a target using a top-down attentional process, whereas scanning with a bottom-up attentional process is not affected. In the serial search task, the amplitude of saccades was significantly smaller in SCA patients than in normal subjects. The variability of saccade amplitude (saccadic dysmetria), number of re-fixations, and unstable fixation (nystagmus) were larger in SCA patients than in normal subjects, accounting for a substantial proportion of scattered fixations around the items. Saccadic dysmetria, re-fixation, and nystagmus may play important roles in the impaired top-down visual scanning in SCA, hampering precise visual processing of individual items.
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spelling pubmed-42788542015-01-05 Top-Down but Not Bottom-Up Visual Scanning is Affected in Hereditary Pure Cerebellar Ataxia Matsuda, Shunichi Matsumoto, Hideyuki Furubayashi, Toshiaki Fukuda, Hideki Emoto, Masaki Hanajima, Ritsuko Tsuji, Shoji Ugawa, Yoshikazu Terao, Yasuo PLoS One Research Article The aim of this study was to clarify the nature of visual processing deficits caused by cerebellar disorders. We studied the performance of two types of visual search (top-down visual scanning and bottom-up visual scanning) in 18 patients with pure cerebellar types of spinocerebellar degeneration (SCA6: 11; SCA31: 7). The gaze fixation position was recorded with an eye-tracking device while the subjects performed two visual search tasks in which they looked for a target Landolt figure among distractors. In the serial search task, the target was similar to the distractors and the subject had to search for the target by processing each item with top-down visual scanning. In the pop-out search task, the target and distractor were clearly discernible and the visual salience of the target allowed the subjects to detect it by bottom-up visual scanning. The saliency maps clearly showed that the serial search task required top-down visual attention and the pop-out search task required bottom-up visual attention. In the serial search task, the search time to detect the target was significantly longer in SCA patients than in normal subjects, whereas the search time in the pop-out search task was comparable between the two groups. These findings suggested that SCA patients cannot efficiently scan a target using a top-down attentional process, whereas scanning with a bottom-up attentional process is not affected. In the serial search task, the amplitude of saccades was significantly smaller in SCA patients than in normal subjects. The variability of saccade amplitude (saccadic dysmetria), number of re-fixations, and unstable fixation (nystagmus) were larger in SCA patients than in normal subjects, accounting for a substantial proportion of scattered fixations around the items. Saccadic dysmetria, re-fixation, and nystagmus may play important roles in the impaired top-down visual scanning in SCA, hampering precise visual processing of individual items. Public Library of Science 2014-12-29 /pmc/articles/PMC4278854/ /pubmed/25545148 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0116181 Text en © 2014 Matsuda et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Matsuda, Shunichi
Matsumoto, Hideyuki
Furubayashi, Toshiaki
Fukuda, Hideki
Emoto, Masaki
Hanajima, Ritsuko
Tsuji, Shoji
Ugawa, Yoshikazu
Terao, Yasuo
Top-Down but Not Bottom-Up Visual Scanning is Affected in Hereditary Pure Cerebellar Ataxia
title Top-Down but Not Bottom-Up Visual Scanning is Affected in Hereditary Pure Cerebellar Ataxia
title_full Top-Down but Not Bottom-Up Visual Scanning is Affected in Hereditary Pure Cerebellar Ataxia
title_fullStr Top-Down but Not Bottom-Up Visual Scanning is Affected in Hereditary Pure Cerebellar Ataxia
title_full_unstemmed Top-Down but Not Bottom-Up Visual Scanning is Affected in Hereditary Pure Cerebellar Ataxia
title_short Top-Down but Not Bottom-Up Visual Scanning is Affected in Hereditary Pure Cerebellar Ataxia
title_sort top-down but not bottom-up visual scanning is affected in hereditary pure cerebellar ataxia
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4278854/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25545148
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0116181
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