Spatial Memory Rehabilitation in Virtual Reality – Extending findings from Epilepsy Patients to the General Population

S. Maidenbaum, Ansh Patel, Elisabeth Stein, J. Jacobs
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引用次数: 7

Abstract

Spatial memory is a critical function. Without it, we cannot understand our environment, situate ourselves within it, or remember where items are located. Most research on the neural basis of spatial memory is conducted either with invasive brain recordings from animals or with non-invasive imaging in humans. An emerging way to link these areas is by studying rare invasive recordings from the human brain, which can be obtained from epilepsy patients who have electrodes surgically implanted for seizure mapping. In recent years this invasive method has expanded our understanding of how the human brain represents space and has also suggested methods for modulating and potentially rehabilitating memory. However, it is unclear whether these results from epilepsy patients generalize to the non-epileptic population, and from testing in hospital rooms to more immersive and comfortable setups. Here, groups of epilepsy patients (n=69) and healthy participants (n=17) performed the same virtual spatial memory task, enabling us to compare their spatial memory performance. Moreover, we compared spatial memory performance between a standard computer screen versus a head-mounted display. We found that the spatial memory performance of epilepsy patients performing our task in a hospital was similar to that of matched healthy participants performing the task in the lab. Furthermore, actual spatial memory performance was similar on the group level irrespective of the interface used, despite the fact that subjects reported higher immersion with the head mounted display. By showing consistent spatial memory performance with a single paradigm across epilepsy patients and healthy participants, as well as with the use of different display modalities, our results provide a baseline for evaluating findings regarding the neural basis of spatial memory and neuromodulation for rehabilitation. More broadly, these results demonstrate that findings from neurosurgical patients are comparable to the wider population.
虚拟现实中的空间记忆康复——将研究结果从癫痫患者扩展到一般人群
空间记忆是一项关键功能。没有它,我们就无法理解我们的环境,无法将自己置于其中,也无法记住物品的位置。大多数关于空间记忆的神经基础的研究都是通过动物的侵入性大脑记录或人类的非侵入性成像进行的。一种将这些区域联系起来的新方法是研究来自人类大脑的罕见侵入性记录,这些记录可以从癫痫患者那里获得,这些患者通过手术植入电极来绘制癫痫发作图。近年来,这种侵入性方法扩大了我们对人类大脑如何代表空间的理解,也提出了调节和潜在恢复记忆的方法。然而,尚不清楚癫痫患者的这些结果是否可以推广到非癫痫人群,以及从病房测试到更沉浸式和舒适的设置。在这里,癫痫患者组(n=69)和健康参与者组(n=17)执行相同的虚拟空间记忆任务,使我们能够比较他们的空间记忆表现。此外,我们比较了标准电脑屏幕和头戴式显示器的空间记忆性能。我们发现癫痫患者在医院完成任务的空间记忆表现与在实验室完成任务的健康参与者相似。此外,无论使用哪种界面,实际的空间记忆表现在小组水平上是相似的,尽管受试者报告头戴式显示器的沉浸感更高。通过显示癫痫患者和健康参与者在单一范式下的一致空间记忆表现,以及使用不同的显示方式,我们的研究结果为评估空间记忆的神经基础和神经调节对康复的影响提供了基线。更广泛地说,这些结果表明神经外科患者的发现与更广泛的人群相当。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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