Imperial College London

Andreas A. Roussakis

Faculty of MedicineNational Heart & Lung Institute

Clinical Project Manager
 
 
 
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Contact

 

+44 (0)20 7594 6822a.roussakis Website

 
 
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Location

 

514ICTEM buildingHammersmith Campus

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Summary

 

Publications

Citation

BibTex format

@article{Parkin:2021:braincomms/fcab175,
author = {Parkin, B and Daws, R and Das, Neves I and Violante, I and Soreq, E and Faisal, A and Sandrone, S and Lao-Kaim, N and Martin-Bastida, A and Roussakis, A-A and Piccini, P and Hampshire, A},
doi = {braincomms/fcab175},
journal = {Brain Communications},
title = {Dissociable effects of age and Parkinson's disease on instruction based learning},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/braincomms/fcab175},
volume = {3},
year = {2021}
}

RIS format (EndNote, RefMan)

TY  - JOUR
AB - The cognitive deficits associated with Parkinson’s disease vary across individuals and change across time, with implications for prognosis and treatment. Key outstanding challenges are to define the distinct behavioural characteristics of this disorder and develop diagnostic paradigms that can assess these sensitively in individuals. In a previous study, we measured different aspects of attentional control in Parkinson’s disease using an established fMRI switching paradigm. We observed no deficits for the aspects of attention the task was designed to examine; instead those with Parkinson’s disease learnt the operational requirements of the task more slowly. We hypothesized that a subset of people with early-to-mid stage Parkinson’s might be impaired when encoding rules for performing new tasks. Here, we directly test this hypothesis and investigate whether deficits in instruction-based learning represent a characteristic of Parkinson’s Disease. Seventeen participants with Parkinson’s disease (8 male; mean age: 61.2 years), 18 older adults (8 male; mean age: 61.3 years) and 20 younger adults (10 males; mean age: 26.7 years) undertook a simple instruction-based learning paradigm in the MRI scanner. They sorted sequences of coloured shapes according to binary discrimination rules that were updated at two-minute intervals. Unlike common reinforcement learning tasks, the rules were unambiguous, being explicitly presented; consequently, there was no requirement to monitor feedback or estimate contingencies. Despite its simplicity, a third of the Parkinson’s group, but only one older adult, showed marked increases in errors, 4 SD greater than the worst performing young adult. The pattern of errors was consistent, reflecting a tendency to misbind discrimination rules. The misbinding behaviour was coupled with reduced frontal, parietal and anterior caudate activity when rules were being encoded, but not when attention was initially o
AU - Parkin,B
AU - Daws,R
AU - Das,Neves I
AU - Violante,I
AU - Soreq,E
AU - Faisal,A
AU - Sandrone,S
AU - Lao-Kaim,N
AU - Martin-Bastida,A
AU - Roussakis,A-A
AU - Piccini,P
AU - Hampshire,A
DO - braincomms/fcab175
PY - 2021///
SN - 2632-1297
TI - Dissociable effects of age and Parkinson's disease on instruction based learning
T2 - Brain Communications
UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/braincomms/fcab175
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/91665
VL - 3
ER -