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Advanced Parkinson's disease effect on goal-directed and habitual processes involved in visuomotor associative learning

Overview of attention for article published in Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, January 2013
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Title
Advanced Parkinson's disease effect on goal-directed and habitual processes involved in visuomotor associative learning
Published in
Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, January 2013
DOI 10.3389/fnhum.2012.00351
Pubmed ID
Authors

Fadila Hadj-Bouziane, Isabelle Benatru, Andrea Brovelli, Hélène Klinger, Stéphane Thobois, Emmanuel Broussolle, Driss Boussaoud, Martine Meunier

Abstract

The present behavioral study re-addresses the question of habit learning in Parkinson's disease (PD). Patients were early onset, non-demented, dopa-responsive, candidates for surgical treatment, similar to those we found earlier as suffering greater dopamine depletion in the putamen than in the caudate nucleus. The task was the same conditional associative learning task as that used previously in monkeys and healthy humans to unveil the striatum involvement in habit learning. Sixteen patients and 20 age- and education-matched healthy control subjects learned sets of 3 visuo-motor associations between complex patterns and joystick displacements during two testing sessions separated by a few hours. We distinguished errors preceding vs. following the first correct response to compare patients' performance during the earliest phase of learning dominated by goal-directed actions with that observed later on, when responses start to become habitual. The disease significantly retarded both learning phases, especially in patients under 60 years of age. However, only the late phase deficit was disease severity-dependent and persisted on the second testing session. These findings provide the first corroboration in Parkinson patients of two ideas well-established in the animal literature. The first is the idea that associating visual stimuli to motor acts is a form of habit learning that engages the striatum. It is confirmed here by the global impairment in visuo-motor learning induced by PD. The second idea is that goal-directed behaviors are predominantly caudate-dependent whereas habitual responses are primarily putamen-dependent. At the advanced PD stages tested here, dopamine depletion is greater in the putamen than in the caudate nucleus. Accordingly, the late phase of learning corresponding to the emergence of habitual responses was more vulnerable to the disease than the early phase dominated by goal-directed actions.

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Mendeley readers

Mendeley readers

The data shown below were compiled from readership statistics for 89 Mendeley readers of this research output. Click here to see the associated Mendeley record.

Geographical breakdown

Country Count As %
Portugal 1 1%
France 1 1%
Unknown 87 98%

Demographic breakdown

Readers by professional status Count As %
Student > Ph. D. Student 23 26%
Researcher 15 17%
Student > Doctoral Student 11 12%
Student > Bachelor 7 8%
Professor 4 4%
Other 16 18%
Unknown 13 15%
Readers by discipline Count As %
Neuroscience 24 27%
Psychology 13 15%
Agricultural and Biological Sciences 13 15%
Medicine and Dentistry 10 11%
Engineering 3 3%
Other 8 9%
Unknown 18 20%
Attention Score in Context

Attention Score in Context

This research output has an Altmetric Attention Score of 1. This is our high-level measure of the quality and quantity of online attention that it has received. This Attention Score, as well as the ranking and number of research outputs shown below, was calculated when the research output was last mentioned on 05 February 2018.
All research outputs
#18,326,065
of 22,693,205 outputs
Outputs from Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
#6,048
of 7,122 outputs
Outputs of similar age
#217,965
of 280,672 outputs
Outputs of similar age from Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
#765
of 862 outputs
Altmetric has tracked 22,693,205 research outputs across all sources so far. This one is in the 11th percentile – i.e., 11% of other outputs scored the same or lower than it.
So far Altmetric has tracked 7,122 research outputs from this source. They typically receive a lot more attention than average, with a mean Attention Score of 14.5. This one is in the 8th percentile – i.e., 8% of its peers scored the same or lower than it.
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