Authors
James M Shine, Glenda M Halliday, Sharon L Naismith, Simon JG Lewis
Publication date
2011/10
Source
Movement Disorders
Volume
26
Issue
12
Pages
2154-2159
Publisher
Wiley Subscription Services, Inc., A Wiley Company
Description
Visual misperceptions and hallucinations are a major cause of distress in patients with Parkinson's disease (PD), particularly in the advanced stages of the condition. Recent work has provided a framework for understanding the pathogenesis of these symptoms, implicating impairments from the retina to the integration of external information with preformed internal images. In this article, we propose a novel hypothesis that attempts to explain the presence of visual misperceptions and hallucinations in PD through the aberrant coordination of complimentary yet competing neural networks. We propose that hallucinations in PD reflect the relative inability to recruit activation in the dorsal attention network in the presence of an ambiguous percept, leading to overreliance on default mode network processing and salience arising from the ventral attention network. This inability is proposed to stem from improper function …
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