Abnormal visual scanning and impaired mental state recognition in pre-manifest Huntington disease.

Exp Brain Res

Huntington and Rare Diseases Unit, Fondazione IRCCS Casa Sollievo Della Sofferenza, San Giovanni Rotondo, Italy.

Published: January 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • Huntington's disease (HD) is a genetic condition that impacts motor skills, cognition, and mental health, with early signs including difficulty in recognizing emotions.
  • Researchers studied eye movement patterns and mental state recognition in 18 individuals with pre-manifest HD (preHD) and compared them to 18 healthy controls using the "Reading the Mind in the Eyes" test.
  • Results showed that preHD participants had significant deficits in recognizing emotions and exhibited abnormal eye movement behaviors, such as fixation patterns that predicted their emotional recognition abilities, highlighting how visual scanning might be affected by emotional factors in this group.

Article Abstract

Huntington's disease (HD) is a genetic neurodegenerative disorder that affects not only the motor but also the cognitive and the neuropsychiatric domain. In particular, deficits in mental state recognition may emerge already at early pre-manifest stages of the disease. The aim of this research was to explore the relation between visual scanning behavior and complex mental state recognition in individuals with pre-manifest HD (preHD). Eighteen preHD and eighteen age- and gender-matched healthy controls took the revised "Reading the Mind in the Eyes" test while their eye-movements were tracked. In addition to the expected deficits in mental state recognition, preHD showed abnormalities concerning all three scanning variables we considered, namely the absolute number of fixations (FC), the average fixation duration (AFD), and the percentage of time spent fixating (FTR). In preHD, FC and FTR but not AFD predicted mental state recognition over and beyond general disease-related declines in cognition and motor functioning. Notably, preHD showed abnormal vertical and horizontal fixation patterns, and these patterns predicted mental state recognition, suggesting the involvement of mechanisms related to the embodied processing of emotional stimuli. Overall, our results suggest that impaired facial mental state recognition in pre-manifest HD is partly due to emotional-motivational factors affecting the visual scanning of facial expressions.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00221-020-05957-xDOI Listing

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