Frontiers in Neurology (Oct 2021)

The Eyes Are More Eloquent Than Words: Anticipatory Looking as an Index of Event Memory in Alzheimer's Disease

  • Yuki Hanazuka,
  • Yuki Hanazuka,
  • Yuki Hanazuka,
  • Akinori Futamura,
  • Satoshi Hirata,
  • Akira Midorikawa,
  • Kenjiro Ono,
  • Mitsuru Kawamura,
  • Mitsuru Kawamura,
  • Mitsuru Kawamura

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2021.642464
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

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Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a disorder in which individuals experience a difficulty in maintaining event memory for when, where, who, and what. However, verbal deficiency, one of the other symptoms of AD, may prevent a precise diagnosis of event memory because existing tests are based on verbal instructions by the tester and verbal response from patient. Therefore, non-verbal methods are essential to evaluate event memory in AD. The present study, using eye tracking, investigated whether AD patients deployed anticipatory looking to target acts related to future events based on previous experience when an identical video was presented to them twice. The results revealed the presence of anticipatory looking, although AD patients were unable to verbally report the content of the video. Our results illustrate that AD patients have a one-time event memory better than previously thought.

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