4.5 Article

Overconfidence in visual perception in parkinson's disease

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 53, Issue 6, Pages 2027-2039

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ejn.15093

Keywords

coherent motion perception; confidence; Parkinson's disease; random dot kinematogram; visual

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institute for Psychobiology in Israel (NIPI) [235-17-18]
  2. Israeli Centers of Research Excellence (I-CORE) [51/11]

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Increased dependence on visual cues in Parkinson's disease may be due to overconfidence in the reliability of these cues, leading to intact visual motion perception but overestimation of visual cue reliability. This overconfidence could contribute to impaired multisensory integration and affect daily activities in PD patients. Further research on PD confidence in somatosensory function is needed to potentially develop new treatments for PD symptoms.
Increased dependence on visual cues in Parkinson's disease (PD) can unbalance the perception-action loop, impair multisensory integration, and affect everyday function of PD patients. It is currently unknown why PD patients seem to be more reliant on their visual cues. We hypothesized that PD patients may be overconfident in the reliability (precision) of their visual cues. In this study we tested coherent visual motion perception in PD, and probed subjective (self-reported) confidence in their visual motion perception. Twenty patients with idiopathic PD, 21 healthy aged-matched controls and 20 healthy young adult participants were presented with visual stimuli of moving dots (random dot kinematograms). They were asked to report: (1) whether the aggregate motion of dots was to the left or to the right, and (2) how confident they were that their perceptual discrimination was correct. Visual motion discrimination thresholds were similar (unimpaired) in PD compared to the other groups. By contrast, PD patients were significantly overconfident in their visual perceptual decisions (p = .002 and p < .001 vs. the age-matched and young adult groups, respectively). These results suggest intact visual motion perception, but overestimation of visual cue reliability, in PD. Overconfidence in visual (vs. other, e.g., somatosensory) cues could underlie increased visual dependence and impaired multisensory/sensorimotor integration in PD. It could thereby contribute to gait and balance impairments, and affect everyday activities, such as driving. Future work should investigate and compare PD confidence in somatosensory function. A better understanding of altered sensory reliance might open up new avenues to treat debilitating PD symptoms.

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