Multimodal neurocognitive markers of naturalistic discourse typify diverse neurodegenerative diseases

Agustina Birba, Sol Fittipaldi, Judith C. Cediel Escobar, Cecilia Gonzalez Campo, Agustina Legaz, Agostina Galiani, Mariano N.Díaz Rivera, Miquel Martorell Caro, Florencia Alifano, Stefanie D. Piña-Escudero, Juan Felipe Cardona, Alejandra Neely, Gonzalo Forno, Mariela Carpinella, Andrea Slachevsky, Cecilia Serrano, Lucas Sedeño, Agustín Ibáñez, Adolfo M. García*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

31 Scopus citations

Abstract

Neurodegeneration has multiscalar impacts, including behavioral, neuroanatomical, and neurofunctional disruptions. Can disease-differential alterations be captured across such dimensions using naturalistic stimuli? To address this question, we assessed comprehension of four naturalistic stories, highlighting action, nonaction, social, and nonsocial events, in Parkinson's disease (PD) and behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD) relative to Alzheimer's disease patients and healthy controls. Text-specific correlates were evaluated via voxel-based morphometry, spatial (fMRI), and temporal (hd-EEG) functional connectivity. PD patients presented action-text deficits related to the volume of action-observation regions, connectivity across motor-related and multimodal-semantic hubs, and frontal hd-EEG hypoconnectivity. BvFTD patients exhibited social-text deficits, associated with atrophy and spatial connectivity patterns along social-network hubs, alongside right frontotemporal hd-EEG hypoconnectivity. Alzheimer's disease patients showed impairments in all stories, widespread atrophy and spatial connectivity patterns, and heightened occipitotemporal hd-EEG connectivity. Our framework revealed disease-specific signatures across behavioral, neuroanatomical, and neurofunctional dimensions, highlighting the sensitivity and specificity of a single naturalistic task. This investigation opens a translational agenda combining ecological approaches and multimodal cognitive neuroscience for the study of neurodegeneration.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)3377-3391
Number of pages15
JournalCerebral Cortex
Volume32
Issue number16
DOIs
StatePublished - 15 Aug 2022

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 The Author(s). Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.

Keywords

  • embodied cognition
  • fMRI/hd-EEG functional connectivity
  • naturalistic texts
  • neurodegeneration
  • voxel-based morphometry

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