Scientific Reports (Jun 2024)

Modulation of response times in early-stage Parkinson’s disease during emotional processing of embodied and non-embodied stimuli

  • Alessandro Botta,
  • Elisa Pelosin,
  • Giovanna Lagravinese,
  • Roberta Marchese,
  • Francesca Di Biasio,
  • Gaia Bonassi,
  • Sara Terranova,
  • Elisa Ravizzotti,
  • Martina Putzolu,
  • Susanna Mezzarobba,
  • Carola Cosentino,
  • Alessio Avenanti,
  • Laura Avanzino

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-63701-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract Valence (positive and negative) and content (embodied vs non-embodied) characteristics of visual stimuli have been shown to influence motor readiness, as tested with response time paradigms. Both embodiment and emotional processing are affected in Parkinson’s disease (PD) due to basal ganglia dysfunction. Here we aimed to investigate, using a two-choice response time paradigm, motor readiness when processing embodied (emotional body language [EBL] and emotional facial expressions [FACS]) vs non-embodied (emotional scenes [IAPS]) stimuli with neutral, happy, and fearful content. We enrolled twenty-five patients with early-stage PD and twenty-five age matched healthy participants. Motor response during emotional processing was assessed by measuring response times (RTs) in a home-based, forced two-choice discrimination task where participants were asked to discriminate the emotional stimulus from the neutral one. Rating of valence and arousal was also performed. A clinical and neuropsychological evaluation was performed on PD patients. Results showed that RTs for PD patients were longer for all conditions compared to HC and that RTs were generally longer in both groups for EBL compared to FACS and IAPS, with the sole exception retrieved for PD, where in discriminating fearful stimuli, RTs for EBL were longer compared to FACS but not to IAPS. Furthermore, in PD only, when discriminating fearful respect to neutral stimuli, RTs were shorter when discriminating FACS compared to IAPS. This study shows that PD patients were faster in discriminating fearful embodied stimuli, allowing us to speculate on mechanisms involving an alternative, compensatory, emotional motor pathway for PD patients undergoing fear processing.

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