Components determining the slowness of information processing in parkinson’s disease

Abstract Introduction Bradyphrenia is a key cognitive feature in Parkinson's disease (PD). There is no consensus on whether information processing speed is impaired or not beyond motor performance. Objective This study aims to explore which perceptual, motor, or cognitive components of informat...

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Main Authors: Aida Arroyo, José A. Periáñez, Marcos Ríos‐Lago, Genny Lubrini, Jorge Andreo, Julián Benito‐León, Elan D. Louis, Juan Pablo Romero
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2021-03-01
Series:Brain and Behavior
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/brb3.2031
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spelling doaj-a05fb51ca70743c0ab6b1fbd5f8d228a2021-03-26T05:45:01ZengWileyBrain and Behavior2162-32792021-03-01113n/an/a10.1002/brb3.2031Components determining the slowness of information processing in parkinson’s diseaseAida Arroyo0José A. Periáñez1Marcos Ríos‐Lago2Genny Lubrini3Jorge Andreo4Julián Benito‐León5Elan D. Louis6Juan Pablo Romero7Facultad de Ciencias Experimentales Universidad Francisco de Vitoria Madrid SpainExperimental Psychology Department Universidad Complutense de Madrid Madrid SpainBasic Psychology II Department UNED, Madrid 28040, Spain; Brain Damage UnitHospital Beata María Ana Madrid SpainExperimental Psychology Department Universidad Complutense de Madrid Madrid SpainFacultad de Ciencias Experimentales Universidad Francisco de Vitoria Madrid SpainDepartment of Neurology University Hospital “12 de Octubre”, Madrid, Spain; Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red sobre Enfermedades Neurodegenerativas (CIBERNED), Spain; Department of MedicineComplutense University Madrid SpainDepartment of Neurology and Neurotherapeutics at UT Southwestern Medical CenterFacultad de Ciencias Experimentales Universidad Francisco de Vitoria, Madrid 28223, Spain; Brain Damage UnitHospital Beata María Ana Madrid SpainAbstract Introduction Bradyphrenia is a key cognitive feature in Parkinson's disease (PD). There is no consensus on whether information processing speed is impaired or not beyond motor performance. Objective This study aims to explore which perceptual, motor, or cognitive components of information processing are involved in the slowdown affecting cognitive performance. Methods The study included 48 patients with PD (age: 63, 3 ± 8, 18; HY I‐III; UPDRS 15,46 ± 7,76) and 53 healthy controls (age: 60,09 ± 12,83). Five reaction time (RT) tasks were administered to all participants. The average RT in each of the tasks and the percentage of correct answers were measured. Patients with PD were in "ON state" at the time of the evaluation. Perceptual, motor, and cognitive components were isolated by means of a series of ANCOVAs. Results As expected, the motor component was slowed down in patients with PD. Moreover, while patients with PD showed slower RT than controls in all tasks, differences between groups did not exponentially increase with the increasing task complexity. ANCOVA analyses also revealed that the perceptual and sustained alert component resulted to be slowed down, with no differences being found in any of the remaining isolated cognitive components (i.e., response strategy‐inhibition, decisional, visual search, or interference control). Conclusions The results revealed that slowness of information processing in PD was mainly associated with an impaired processing speed of the motor and perceptual‐alertness components analyzed. The results may help designing new neurorehabilitation strategies, focusing on the improvement of perceptual and alertness mechanisms.https://doi.org/10.1002/brb3.2031CognitionHuman Information ProcessingParkinson´s diseaseReaction Time
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Aida Arroyo
José A. Periáñez
Marcos Ríos‐Lago
Genny Lubrini
Jorge Andreo
Julián Benito‐León
Elan D. Louis
Juan Pablo Romero
spellingShingle Aida Arroyo
José A. Periáñez
Marcos Ríos‐Lago
Genny Lubrini
Jorge Andreo
Julián Benito‐León
Elan D. Louis
Juan Pablo Romero
Components determining the slowness of information processing in parkinson’s disease
Brain and Behavior
Cognition
Human Information Processing
Parkinson´s disease
Reaction Time
author_facet Aida Arroyo
José A. Periáñez
Marcos Ríos‐Lago
Genny Lubrini
Jorge Andreo
Julián Benito‐León
Elan D. Louis
Juan Pablo Romero
author_sort Aida Arroyo
title Components determining the slowness of information processing in parkinson’s disease
title_short Components determining the slowness of information processing in parkinson’s disease
title_full Components determining the slowness of information processing in parkinson’s disease
title_fullStr Components determining the slowness of information processing in parkinson’s disease
title_full_unstemmed Components determining the slowness of information processing in parkinson’s disease
title_sort components determining the slowness of information processing in parkinson’s disease
publisher Wiley
series Brain and Behavior
issn 2162-3279
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Abstract Introduction Bradyphrenia is a key cognitive feature in Parkinson's disease (PD). There is no consensus on whether information processing speed is impaired or not beyond motor performance. Objective This study aims to explore which perceptual, motor, or cognitive components of information processing are involved in the slowdown affecting cognitive performance. Methods The study included 48 patients with PD (age: 63, 3 ± 8, 18; HY I‐III; UPDRS 15,46 ± 7,76) and 53 healthy controls (age: 60,09 ± 12,83). Five reaction time (RT) tasks were administered to all participants. The average RT in each of the tasks and the percentage of correct answers were measured. Patients with PD were in "ON state" at the time of the evaluation. Perceptual, motor, and cognitive components were isolated by means of a series of ANCOVAs. Results As expected, the motor component was slowed down in patients with PD. Moreover, while patients with PD showed slower RT than controls in all tasks, differences between groups did not exponentially increase with the increasing task complexity. ANCOVA analyses also revealed that the perceptual and sustained alert component resulted to be slowed down, with no differences being found in any of the remaining isolated cognitive components (i.e., response strategy‐inhibition, decisional, visual search, or interference control). Conclusions The results revealed that slowness of information processing in PD was mainly associated with an impaired processing speed of the motor and perceptual‐alertness components analyzed. The results may help designing new neurorehabilitation strategies, focusing on the improvement of perceptual and alertness mechanisms.
topic Cognition
Human Information Processing
Parkinson´s disease
Reaction Time
url https://doi.org/10.1002/brb3.2031
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