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  3. Acute peripheral vestibular deficit increases redundancy in random number generation
 

Acute peripheral vestibular deficit increases redundancy in random number generation

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BORIS DOI
10.7892/boris.95647
Date of Publication
February 2017
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

Institut für Psycholo...

Universitätsklinik fü...

Author
Moser, Ivan
Institut für Psychologie, Kognitive Psychologie, Wahrnehmung und Methodenlehre
Vibert, Dominique Christine
Universitätsklinik für Hals-, Nasen- und Ohrenkrankheiten, Kopf- und Halschirurgie (HNOK)
Caversaccio, Marco
Universitätsklinik für Hals-, Nasen- und Ohrenkrankheiten, Kopf- und Halschirurgie (HNOK)
Mast, Fred
Institut für Psychologie, Kognitive Psychologie, Wahrnehmung und Methodenlehre
Subject(s)

100 - Philosophy::150...

600 - Technology::610...

Series
Experimental brain research
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
0014-4819
Publisher
Springer
Language
English
Publisher DOI
10.1007/s00221-016-4829-8
PubMed ID
27847985
Uncontrolled Keywords

Executive functions

Numerical cognition

Random number generat...

Spatial attention

Vestibular deficit

Description
Unilateral peripheral vestibular deficit leads to broad cognitive difficulties and biases in spatial orientation. More specifically, vestibular patients typically show a spatial bias toward their affected ear in the subjective visual vertical, head and trunk orientation, fall tendency, and walking trajectory. By means of a random number generation task, we set out to investigate how an acute peripheral vestibular deficit affects the mental representation of numbers in space. Furthermore, the random number generation task allowed us to test if patients with peripheral vestibular deficit show evidence of impaired executive functions while keeping the head straight and while performing active head turns. Previous research using galvanic vestibular stimulation in healthy people has shown no effects on number space, but revealed increased redundancy of the generated numbers. Other studies reported a spatial bias in number representation during active and passive head turns. In this experiment, we tested 43 patients with acute vestibular neuritis (18 patients with left-sided and 25 with right-sided vestibular deficit) and 28 age-matched healthy controls. We found no bias in number space in patients with peripheral vestibular deficit but showed increased redundancy in patients during active head turns. Patients showed worse performance in generating sequences of random numbers, which indicates a deficit in the updating component of executive functions. We argue that RNG is a promising candidate for a time- and cost-effective assessment of executive functions in patients suffering from a peripheral vestibular deficit.
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/149924
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10.1007_s00221-016-4829-8.pdftextAdobe PDF554.2 KBpublishedOpen
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