Bek, Judith and Gowen, Emma and Vogt, Stefan and Crawford, Trevor and Poliakoff, Ellen (2021) Action observation and imitation in Parkinson’s disease : The influence of biological and non-biological stimuli. Neuropsychologia, 150: 107690. ISSN 0028-3932
Imitation_in_PD_Bek_et_al_manuscript_Oct2020.pdf - Accepted Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs.
Download (1MB)
Abstract
Action observation and imitation have been found to influence movement in people with Parkinson’s disease (PD), but simple visual stimuli can also guide their movement, and previous studies have not directly compared these. To investigate whether action observation may provide a more effective stimulus, the present study examined the effects of observing human pointing movements and simple visual cues on hand kinematics and eye movements in people with mild to moderate PD and age-matched controls. In Experiment 1 participants observed videos of movement sequences between horizontal positions, depicted by a simple cue with or without a moving human hand, then imitated the sequence either without further visual input (consecutive) or while watching the video again (concurrent). Modulation of movement duration in accordance with changes in the observed stimulus increased when the simple cue was accompanied by the hand, and in the concurrent task, whereas modulation of horizontal amplitude was greater with the simple cue alone and in the consecutive task. Experiment 2 compared imitation of kinematically-matched dynamic biological (human hand) and nonbiological (shape) stimuli, which moved with a high or low vertical trajectory. Both groups exhibited greater modulation for the hand than the shape, and differences in eye movements suggested closer tracking of the hand. Despite producing slower and smaller movements overall, the PD group showed a similar pattern of imitation to controls across conditions. The findings demonstrate that observing human action influences aspects of movement such as duration or trajectory more strongly than non-biological stimuli, particularly during concurrent imitation.