Frontiers in Human Neuroscience (Oct 2021)

The Cognitive-Vestibular Compensation Hypothesis: How Cognitive Impairments Might Be the Cost of Coping With Compensation

  • Emilie Lacroix,
  • Emilie Lacroix,
  • Naïma Deggouj,
  • Naïma Deggouj,
  • Naïma Deggouj,
  • Martin Gareth Edwards,
  • Martin Gareth Edwards,
  • Jeroen Van Cutsem,
  • Jeroen Van Cutsem,
  • Martine Van Puyvelde,
  • Martine Van Puyvelde,
  • Martine Van Puyvelde,
  • Nathalie Pattyn,
  • Nathalie Pattyn

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnhum.2021.732974
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15

Abstract

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Previous research in vestibular cognition has clearly demonstrated a link between the vestibular system and several cognitive and emotional functions. However, the most coherent results supporting this link come from rodent models and healthy human participants artificial stimulation models. Human research with vestibular-damaged patients shows much more variability in the observed results, mostly because of the heterogeneity of vestibular loss (VL), and the interindividual differences in the natural vestibular compensation process. The link between the physiological consequences of VL (such as postural difficulties), and specific cognitive or emotional dysfunction is not clear yet. We suggest that a neuropsychological model, based on Kahneman’s Capacity Model of Attention, could contribute to the understanding of the vestibular compensation process, and partially explain the variability of results observed in vestibular-damaged patients. Several findings in the literature support the idea of a limited quantity of cognitive resources that can be allocated to cognitive tasks during the compensation stages. This basic mechanism of attentional limitations may lead to different compensation profiles in patients, with or without cognitive dysfunction, depending on the compensation stage. We suggest several objective and subjective measures to evaluate this cognitive-vestibular compensation hypothesis.

Keywords