4.6 Article

Effects of Chronic Alcohol Use Disorder on the Visual Tilt Illusion

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PSYCHIATRY
Volume 12, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2021.647615

Keywords

alcohol use disorder; tilt illusion; visual perception; inhibition; primary visual cortex

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31800874]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of Zhejiang Province [LY21C090001]
  3. Applied medicine research project of Hefei Health and Family Planning Commission [hwk2017yb016]
  4. K. C. Wong Magna Fund in Ningbo University
  5. Anhui Medical University [2020xkj062]

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The study focused on visual spatial information processing in chronic AUD patients during abstinence by examining the tilt illusion effect. Results showed significantly weaker tilt repulsion effect at +/- 15 degrees surround orientation and higher lapse rate in patients with chronic AUD compared to healthy controls under all tested surround orientations. These findings provide psychophysical evidence of differences in visual perception between AUD patients and healthy controls.
Rationale: Among the serious consequences of alcohol use disorder (AUD) is the reduced ability to process visual information. It is also generally agreed that AUD tends to occur with disturbed excitation-inhibition (EI) balance in the central nervous system. Thus, a specific visual behavioral probe could directly qualify the El dysfunction in patients with AUD. The tilt illusion (TI) is a paradigmatic example of contextual influences on perception of central target. The phenomenon shows a characteristic dependence on the angle between the inducing surround stimulus and the central target test. For small angles, there is a repulsion effect; for larger angles, there is a smaller attraction effect. The center-surround inhibition in tilt repulsion is considered to come from spatial orientational interactions between orientation-tuned neurons in the primary visual cortex (V1), and tilt attraction is from higher-level effects of orientation processing in the visual information processing. Objectives: The present study focuses on visual spatial information processing and explores whether chronic AUD patients in abstinence period exhibited abnormal TI compared with healthy controls. Methods: The participants are 30 male volunteers (20-46 years old) divided into two groups: the study group consists of 15 clinically diagnosed AUD patients undergoing abstinence from alcohol, and the control group consists of 15 healthy volunteers. The TI consists of a center target surround with an annulus (both target and annulus are sinusoidal grating with spatial frequency = 2 cycles per degree). The visual angle between center and surround is a variable restricted to 0 degrees, +/- 15 degrees, +/- 30 degrees, or +/- 75 degrees. For measuring the TI, participants have to report whether the center target grating orientation tilted clockwise or counterclockwise from the internal vertical orientation by pressing corresponding keys on the computer keyboard. No feedback is provided regarding response correctness. Results: The results reveal significantly weaker tilt repulsion effect under surround orientation +/- 15 degrees (p < 0.05) and higher lapse rate (attention limitation index) under all tested surround orientations (all ps < 0.05) in patients with chronic AUD compared with health controls. Conclusions: These results provide psychophysical evidence that visual perception of center-contextual stimuli is different between AUD and healthy control groups.

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