Alpha oscillations during visual selective attention are aberrant in youth and adults with cerebral palsy

Author:

Hoffman Rashelle M12,Trevarrow Michael P3,Lew Brandon J3,Wilson Tony W34,Kurz Max J34ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Munroe-Meyer Institute for Genetics and Rehabilitation, University of Nebraska Medical Center , 6902 Pine St, Omaha, NE 68106, United States

2. Department of Physical Therapy, Creighton University , 2500 California Plz, Omaha, NE 68178, United States

3. Institute for Human Neuroscience, Boys Town National Research Hospital , 14090 Mother Teresa Lane, Omaha, NE 68010, United States

4. Department of Pharmacology and Neuroscience, Creighton University , 2500 California Plz, Omaha, NE 68178, United States

Abstract

Abstract Our understanding of the neurobiology underlying cognitive dysfunction in persons with cerebral palsy is very limited, especially in the neurocognitive domain of visual selective attention. This investigation utilized magnetoencephalography and an Eriksen arrow-based flanker task to quantify the dynamics underlying selective attention in a cohort of youth and adults with cerebral palsy (n = 31; age range = 9 to 47 yr) and neurotypical controls (n = 38; age range = 11 to 49 yr). The magnetoencephalography data were transformed into the time-frequency domain to identify neural oscillatory responses and imaged using a beamforming approach. The behavioral results indicated that all participants exhibited a flanker effect (greater response time for the incongruent compared to congruent condition) and that individuals with cerebral palsy were slower and less accurate during task performance. We computed interference maps to focus on the attentional component and found aberrant alpha (8 to 14 Hz) oscillations in the right primary visual cortices in the group with cerebral palsy. Alpha and theta (4 to 7 Hz) oscillations were also seen in the left and right insula, and these oscillations varied with age across all participants. Overall, persons with cerebral palsy exhibit deficiencies in the cortical dynamics serving visual selective attention, but these aberrations do not appear to be uniquely affected by age.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Promotion of Doctoral Studies

Foundation for Physical Therapy

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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