Escritos de Psicología - Psychological Writings 1138-2635: Issn: Comitederedaccion@escritosdepsicologia - Es
Escritos de Psicología - Psychological Writings 1138-2635: Issn: Comitederedaccion@escritosdepsicologia - Es
Escritos de Psicología - Psychological Writings 1138-2635: Issn: Comitederedaccion@escritosdepsicologia - Es
ISSN: 1138-2635
[email protected]
Universidad de Mlaga
Espaa
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Correspondence: Mara J. Blanca, Dpto. de Psicobiologa y Metodologa de las Ciencias del Comportamiento, Facultad de Psicologa, Campus Universitario de Teatinos, s/n, Mlaga, 29071, Tel. (+34) 952 13 10 88, [email protected]
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Alzheimers disease (AD) is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder that is characterized by progressive memory
loss and additional cognitive impairments of gradual onset and
which show a continual decline. Several studies reveal that
visual perception and attention are impaired at early stages
of AD (Adlington, Laws, & Gale, 2009; Baddeley, Baddeley,
Bucks, & Wilcock, 2001; Valenti, 2010), and hence these deficits could help to detect AD prior to the loss of cognitive and
memory functions (Valenti, 2010). Deficits in visual processing
in AD are related to neuropathological changes in specific areas
of the brain (Backus, Fleet, Parker, & Heeger, 2001; CroninGolomb, Gilmore, Neargarder, Morrison, & Laudatte, 2007;
Nishida et al., 2001; Thiyagesh et al., 2009; Zakzanis, Graham,
& Campbell, 2003). Zakzanis et al. (2003) conducted a review
of structural and functional imaging which included hippocampal deterioration as neuroimaging profile for early stages of
AD, and a pathology within the medial temporal lobes and the
anterior cingulate gyrus for longer duration patients with AD.
Thiyagesh et al. (2009) compared AD patients with healthy
elderly participants in response to a visuospatial task using
functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and they found
that patients with AD showed hypoactivation in, among other
regions, the superior parietal lobe, parieto-occipital cortex and
premotor cortices, as well as increased activation in the inferior
parietal lobule.
Most aspects of visual cognition are impaired in AD,
including face processing (Tippett, Blackwood, & Farah,
2003; Farah, Levinson, & Klein, 1995), object recognition
and naming (Adlington et al., 2009; Laws, Adlington, Gale,
Moreno-Martnez, & Sartori, 2007; Viggiano et al., 2007),
visuomotor integration (Ghilardi et al., 1999; Tippett & Sergio,
2006), spatial contrast sensitivity (Cronin-Golomb et al., 2007;
Rizzo, Anderson, Dawson, & Nawrot, 2000; Viggiano et al.,
2007) and visual-perceptual organization ability (Kurylo,
Corkin, Rizzo, & Growdon, 1996; Paxton et al., 2007). Likewise, the ability to integrate visual elements into global shapes
decreases in patients with AD, causing deficits in global processing compared to local processing, even at very early stages
of the disease (Fernndez-Duque & Black, 2008; Matsumoto,
Ohigashi, Fujimori, & Mori, 2000; Slavin, Mattingley, Bradshaw, & Storey, 2002; Thomas & Forde, 2006).
In general, the research carried out on global and local processing of visual information includes hierarchical stimuli, i.e.,
large figures, representing the global level, that are made up of
small figures, representing the local level. Experiments include
either selective or divided attention tasks. In selective attention
tasks, participants are instructed to indicate whether or not the
target appears at a specific level of the visual pattern, ignoring the other level. In divided attention tasks, participants have
to detect the presence of the target in the stimulus wherever it
appears, either at global or local levels. Using these experimental procedures, Slavin et al. (2002) showed that patients with
AD process local features more quickly and more accurately
than they do global ones, and also that they were slower to
switch their attention between the levels of hierarchical stimuli
in divided attention tasks.
Several researchers have proposed a hypothesis of an
impaired spotlight of attention to explain the global processing deficit. They suggest that patients with AD have a restricted
attention spotlight, such that they have no problem in perceiving a local feature of the object but they fail to perceive enough
features to integrate them and organize the object shape as a
whole (Coslett, Stark, Rajarm, & Saffran, 1995; Matsumoto et
al., 2000; Stark, Grafman, & Fertig, 1997).
The aim of this paper was to explore global and local processing in patients with AD at non-advanced stage compared to
healthy elders. This was done by administering the Global and
Local Attention Test (AGL; from the original Spanish: AGLAtencin global y local; Blanca, Zalabardo, Rando, LpezMontiel, & Luna, 2005). The AGL uses hierarchical stimuli
and provides several scores that indicate speed and accuracy in
analyzing global and local figures. If there is a global processing deficit related to AD, people with AD would be expected
to score lower when analyzing global figures rather than local
ones, and this difference would be higher than that found
among healthy elders.
Method
Participants
Participants were 100 individuals aged 60 years or over (42
men and 58 women). Fifty were AD patients with mild or moderate dementia (13 men and 37 women; M=76.20 years old,
SD=5.15) and 50 were healthy elders (29 men and 21 women;
M= 74.52 years old; SD=6.60). The sample distribution is
shown in Table 1.
Table 1. Sample distribution as a function of group and age.
Age
Control group
60-70
AD group
11
71-80
31
33
81-90
10
23
Results
Previous data analysis revealed that sex had neither a main
effect nor an interaction effect with any of the other factors
considered. Therefore, sex was eliminated from the analyses
in order to increase the number of participants in the cells. A
2x3x2 analysis of variance (ANOVA) with two grouping factors and one within factor was subsequently performed. The
grouping factors were group (control and Alzheimer groups)
and age (60-70, 71-80 and 81-90 years old). The within factor
was target level (global and local levels). The accuracy or
number of correct responses when detecting the target on the
AGL was recorded. Descriptive statistics are shown in Table 2
and ANOVA results in Table 3.
Apparatus
The Mini Mental State Examination (MMSE; Folstein et
al., 1975, 2001) was administered to all the participants. The
MMSE is used to screen for cognitive deficits, estimate their
severity, and follow their course over time. It explores a number
of areas such as orientation to time, orientation to place, registration, attention and calculation, recall, naming, repetition,
comprehension, reading, writing, and drawing. A score of 27
points or more indicates a normal cognitive function. Lower
scores can indicate mild deficit (21-26 points), moderate deficit
(11-20 points) or severe deficit (0-10 points).
The Global and Local Attention Test (AGL; from the
original Spanish: AGL-Atencin global y local; Blanca et al.,
2005) was administered to assess the ability to process global
and local figures. This test is based on hierarchical stimuli, i.e.,
large figures, representing the global level, that are made up
of small figures, representing the local level. The figures were
large incomplete squares, that is, squares with the right (), left
(), superior () or inferior () side missing (Figure 1). The
combinations of these figures at both levels generate different
types of stimuli that are presented in series of 30 on each page.
Participants have to indicate those figures in which the target
(the incomplete square with its left side missing, ) appears
at either the global or local level. This task is a divided attention task because switching attention between both levels is
required. The AGL provides the following scores: Global score
or number of correct responses when detecting the target at the
global level; Local score or number of correct responses when
detecting the target at the local level; Total score, defined as the
sum of the Global and Local scores; and the Relative Efficiency
score, defined as the Global score minus the Local one. This
study only considered accuracy in detecting the target at either
the global or local level.
Alzheimer
Global
14.56 (2.97)
Local
16.56 (3.91)
71-80
12.17 (3.50)
13.49 (3.04)
81-90
10.31 (3.13)
11.61 (2.55)
60-70
1.55 (0.94)
7.46 (1.64)
71-80
1.64 (1.06)
7.61 (1.64)
81-90
1.51 (0.84)
6.51 (1.04)
Table 3. Results from the group x age x target level ANOVA, showing degrees of freedom (d.f.), F statistic, probability (p) and effect size
(partial eta square).
Effects
Group
Age
Target level
Group x age
Group x target level
Age x target level
Group x age x target level
d.f.
1, 94
2, 94
1, 94
2, 94
1, 94
2, 94
2, 94
F
296.95
6.49
124.56
4.89
40.47
0.40
0.28
p
<.001
.002
<.001
.01
<.001
.67
.75
partial 2
.76
.12
.57
.09
.30
.008
.006
Age
60-70
Target:
Procedure
The tests were administered individually, by a trained
psychologist, in a silent room at the participants usual place
of residence and without any interruptions. The MMSE was
administered first, followed by the AGL in the same session.
24
7 1- 8 0 y e a r s
C o n tro l
8 1- 9 0 y e a r s
A lz h e ime r
Lo cal
C o n tro l
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Received: April 19, 2010
Accepted: June 15, 2010
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