Mechanisms underlying corruption of working memory in Parkinson's disease

Author:

Fallon Sean James12ORCID,van Rhee Chevonne1,Kienast Annika1,Manohar Sanjay G.13,Husain Masud13

Affiliation:

1. Department of Experimental Psychology University of Oxford Oxford UK

2. School of Psychology University of Plymouth Plymouth UK

3. Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences John Radcliffe Hospital Oxford UK

Abstract

AbstractWorking memory (WM) impairments are reported to occur in patients with Parkinson's disease (PD). However, the mechanisms are unclear. Here, we investigate several putative factors that might drive poor performance, by examining the precision of recall, the order in which items are recalled and whether memories are corrupted by random guessing (attentional lapses). We used two separate tasks that examined the quality of WM recall under different loads and retention periods, as well as a traditional digit span test. Firstly, on a simple measure of WM recall, where patients were asked to reproduce the orientation of a centrally presented arrow, overall recall was not significantly impaired. However, there was some evidence for increased guessing (attentional lapses). On a new analogue version of the Corsi‐span task, where participants had to reproduce on a touchscreen the exact spatial pattern of presented stimuli in the order and locations in which they appeared, there was a reduction in the precision of spatial WM at higher loads. This deficit was due to misremembering item order. At the highest load, there was reduced recall precision, whereas increased guessing was only observed at intermediate set sizes. Finally, PD patients had impaired backward, but not forward, digit spans. Overall, these results reveal the task‐ and load‐dependent nature of WM deficits in PD. On simple low‐load tasks, attentional lapses predominate, whereas at higher loads, in the spatial domain, the corruption of mnemonic information—both order item and precision—emerge as the main driver of impairment.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Behavioral Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology

Reference62 articles.

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