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Flanker compatibility effects in patients with Parkinson's disease: impact of target onset delay and trial-by-trial stimulus variation
Authors:Cagigas Xavier E  Filoteo J Vincent  Stricker John L  Rilling Laurie M  Friedrich Frances J
Institution:aSDSU/UCSD Joint Doctoral Program in Clinical Psychology, USA;bUniversity of California, San Diego, USA;cVeterans Administration San Diego Healthcare System, 3350 La Village Drive, San Diego, CA 92161, USA;dUniversity of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas, USA;eUniversity of Utah, Salt Lake City, USA
Abstract:Parkinson’s disease (PD) patients and healthy controls were administered a flanker task that consisted of the presentation of colored targets and distractors. Participants were required to attend to the center target and identify its color. The stimulus displays were either congruent (i.e., the target and flankers were the same color) or incongruent. The time between the onset of the flanker and the target color (the target onset delay) was either short or long. Results indicated that PD patients and controls did not differ in the magnitude of the flanker effect within individual trials in that both groups demonstrated a typical flanker effect at the short target onset delay and neither group demonstrated a flanker effect at the longer delay. However, when performance was examined on a trial-by-trial basis, PD patients demonstrated a slowing of reaction time relative to controls when having to make the same response across consecutive trials at longer inter-trial intervals when the flankers were incongruent across consecutive trials and the display on the second of two trials was incongruent. These results indicate that PD patients are impaired in inhibiting the distractors over an extended delay and that this deficit may impact motor responding in these patients, suggesting that the basal ganglia contribute to the interface of attention and action.
Keywords:Parkinson’  s disease  Attention  Basal ganglia  Switching  Inhibition  Action selection
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