4.4 Article

Disturbances of visual motion perception in bipolar disorder

Journal

BIPOLAR DISORDERS
Volume 16, Issue 4, Pages 354-365

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/bdi.12173

Keywords

bipolar disorder; magnocellular; motion; parvocellular; psychiatric disorders; temporal processing; vision

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Mental Health [1 RO1 MH62150, NIMH 1 R21 MH07187-1, R01 MH074983]
  2. NARSAD

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Objectives While cognitive deficits have been well documented in patients with bipolar disorder, visual perception has been less well characterized. Such deficits appear in schizophrenia, which shares genetic risk factors with bipolar disorder, and may contribute to disturbances in visual cognition and learning. Methods The present study investigated visual perception in bipolar disorder using psychophysical tests of contrast sensitivity, dot motion discrimination, and form discrimination. The relationship of these measures to mood state, medication status, and cognitive function was investigated. Sixty-one patients with type I bipolar disorder and 67 comparison subjects were tested. Results Results indicated a deficit in dot motion trajectory discrimination in both euthymic and ill individuals with bipolar disorder, as well as a global deficit in moving grating contrast sensitivity. Ill individuals with bipolar disorder were impaired in psychomotor processing, but this finding was not related to visual processing performance. Conclusions These findings could be due to disturbances in specific visual pathways involved in the processing of motion properties, or to a more general deficit which impairs processing of temporally modulated stimuli.

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