Frontiers in Human Neuroscience (Mar 2023)

A dual-task-embedded virtual reality system for intelligent quantitative assessment of cognitive processing speed

  • Yuzhao Zhou,
  • Yixuan Zhao,
  • Zirui Xiang,
  • Zhixin Yan,
  • Lin Shu,
  • Lin Shu,
  • Lin Shu,
  • Xiangmin Xu,
  • Xiangmin Xu,
  • Xiangmin Xu,
  • Lulu Zhang,
  • Xiang Tian

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnhum.2023.1158650
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17

Abstract

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IntroductionProcessing speed is defined as the ability to quickly process information, which is generally considered as one of the affected cognitive functions of multiple sclerosis and schizophrenia. Paper–pencil type tests are traditionally used in the assessment of processing speed. However, these tests generally need to be conducted under the guidance of clinicians in a specific environment, which limits their application in cognitive assessment or training in daily life. Therefore, this paper proposed an intelligent evaluation method of processing speed to assist clinicians in diagnosis.MethodsWe created an immersive virtual street embedded with Stroop task (VR-Street). The behavior and performance information was obtained by performing the dual-task of street-crossing and Stroop, and a 50-participant dataset was established with the label of standard scale. Utilizing Pearson correlation coefficient to find the relationship between the dual-task features and the cognitive test results, and an intelligent evaluation model was developed using machine learning.ResultsStatistical analysis showed that all Stroop task features were correlated with cognitive test results, and some behavior features also showed correlation. The estimated results showed that the proposed method can estimate the processing speed score with an adequate accuracy (mean absolute error of 0.800, relative accuracy of 0.916 and correlation coefficient of 0.804). The combination of Stroop features and behavior features showed better performance than single task features.DiscussionThe results of this work indicates that the dual-task design in this study better mobilizes participants’ attention and cognitive resources, and more fully reflects participants’ cognitive processing speed. The proposed method provides a new opportunity for accurate quantitative evaluation of cognitive function through virtual reality.

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