Preserved Extra-Foveal Processing of Object Semantics in Alzheimer’s Disease

Author:

Cimminella Francesco12,D’Innocenzo Giorgia3,Sala Sergio Della1,Iavarone Alessandro4,Musella Caterina5,Coco Moreno I.36ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Human Cognitive Neuroscience, Psychology, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, United Kingdom

2. Laboratory of Experimental Psychology, Suor Orsola Benincasa University, Naples, Italy

3. Faculdade de Psicologia, Universidade de Lisboa, Lisbon, Portugal

4. Neurological Unit, CTO Hospital, AORN “Ospedali dei Colli”, Naples, Italy

5. Associazione Italiana Malattia d’Alzheimer (AIMA sezione Campania), Naples, Italy

6. School of Psychology, The University of East London, London, United Kingdom

Abstract

Alzheimer’s disease (AD) patients underperform on a range of tasks requiring semantic processing, but it is unclear whether this impairment is due to a generalised loss of semantic knowledge or to issues in accessing and selecting such information from memory. The objective of this eye-tracking visual search study was to determine whether semantic expectancy mechanisms known to support object recognition in healthy adults are preserved in AD patients. Furthermore, as AD patients are often reported to be impaired in accessing information in extra-foveal vision, we investigated whether that was also the case in our study. Twenty AD patients and 20 age-matched controls searched for a target object among an array of distractors presented extra-foveally. The distractors were either semantically related or unrelated to the target (e.g., a car in an array with other vehicles or kitchen items). Results showed that semantically related objects were detected with more difficulty than semantically unrelated objects by both groups, but more markedly by the AD group. Participants looked earlier and for longer at the critical objects when these were semantically unrelated to the distractors. Our findings show that AD patients can process the semantics of objects and access it in extra-foveal vision. This suggests that their impairments in semantic processing may reflect difficulties in accessing semantic information rather than a generalised loss of semantic memory.

Funder

Leverhulme Trust

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Geriatrics and Gerontology,Neurology (clinical)

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