6533b82dfe1ef96bd1291fae

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Testing cognition and rehabilitation in unilateral neglect with wedge prism adaptation: multiple interplays between sensorimotor adaptation and spatial cognition

Marco CalabriaYves RossettiLaure PisellaShaun GallagherCarine MichelAlessandro FarnèJacques LuautéJacques HonoréGilles RodeSophie Jacquin-courtois

subject

Sensory processingmedicine.medical_treatmentmedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesMultisensory integrationCognitionSpatial cognitionmedicine.disease050105 experimental psychologyNeglect03 medical and health sciences[SCCO]Cognitive science0302 clinical medicineUnilateral neglectExtinction (neurology)medicine0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesPsychologyPrism adaptation030217 neurology & neurosurgeryCognitive psychologymedia_common

description

Spatial neglect is a neurological condition characterised by deficits for perceiving, attending, representing, and/or performing actions within their left-sided space, responsible for numerous debilitating effects in everyday life, for poor functional recovery, and for decreased ability to benefit from treatment. Exposure to a right lateral displacement of the visual field (induced by a simple target-pointing task with base-left wedge prisms) is known to directionally bias visuomotor coordination and can be compensated by both sensorimotor adaptation and cognitive processes. Sensorimotor adaptation gives rise to after-effects whose duration is amplified in neglect patients and has been repeatedly shown to improve most neglect symptoms. Interestingly the effectiveness of PA has also been demonstrated for non-motor and non-visual tasks, such as for somatosensory extinction, for deficits in mental imagery of geographic maps and in number bisection, and even for visuo-constructive disorders, i.e. for unexposed sensory and motor modalities. Visuomotor adaptation appears to interact with higher-order brain functions related to multisensory integration and can have beneficial effects on sensory processing in different modalities as well as cognition. The bottom-up effects of prism adaptation on spatial cognition can also be applied to patients with complex regional pain syndrome who exhibit a spatial cognition bias towards the affected side. Such bottom-up effects exemplify the powerful potential of new approaches to rehabilitation that rely on physiological grounds and bypass intentional control, resulting in reduced attentional cost. We speculate that bottom-up effects may be completed by rounds of reverberation forming a virtuous circle leading to full-blown therapeutic effects.

https://hal.univ-lille.fr/hal-02358627