Source
Article: Varnava, A., Dervinis, M. & Chambers, C.D. (2013). The
predictive nature of pseudoneglect for visual neglect: Evidence from parietal
theta burst stimulation. PLOS ONE 8(6): e65851. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0065851. [pdf]
[data
and analyses]
-----------------------
I’m excited
about this latest research briefing for several reasons.
First, as
I’ll explain below, I think the study tells us something new about how the human
brain represents space, with potential clinical applications in
neuropsychology. Second, the study represents my group’s first excursion into the
world of open access
publishing and open
science (including open data sharing) – something I feel strongly about and
have committed to pursuing in our
recently awarded BBSRC project. And finally, the manuscript itself has a
rocky history that left me disillusioned
with the journal Neuropsychologia
and, soon after, motivated me to join
others in calling for publishing
reform.
The Research
Lets start
by talking about the science. Our aim in this study was to test for a link between
two types of visual spatial bias called ‘neglect’ and ‘pseudoneglect’.
Neglect (also
known as ‘unilateral
neglect’) is a neurological syndrome that arises after brain injury – most
often due to a stroke that permanently damages the right hemisphere. Patients
with neglect present with a striking lack of attention and awareness to objects
presented on the left side of their midline. Such behaviours may include ignoring
food on the left side of a dinner plate or failing to draw the left side of
objects. Importantly, the patients aren’t simply blind on their left side. The visual parts of the brain are generally
intact while the damage is limited to parietal, temporal, or frontal cortex.
Neglect has
been studied for many years and we know a lot
about how and why it arises. But one unanswered question is how the spatial
bias of neglect relates to other spatial biases that are completely normal. We felt this was an important question because
we don’t know enough at a basic level about how the brain represents space, so testing for neurocognitive links
between spatial phenomena helps us build better theories. Furthermore, if there happens
to be a predictive relationship between neglect and other forms of bias, we may
be able to estimate the likely severity of neglect before a person has a stroke. This could have a range of useful applications
in clinical therapy and management.
Enter ‘pseudoneglect’. Pseudoneglect
is a normal bias in which people ignore a small part of their left or right side of space. One simple way to measure this is to ask someone to cross
the centre of a straight horizontal line. Most people will
misbisect the line to the left or right of its true centre. This effect is tiny (in the order of millimetres) but reliable.
In this
study we wanted to know whether patterns of pre-existing bias, as reflected by
pseudoneglect, predict the patterns of actual neglect following neurological
interference. Of course, we couldn’t give our participants permanent brain
injury, so we decided to use transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) to
simulate some of the effects of a brain lesion. Using a particular kind of
repetitive TMS called ‘theta burst stimulation’, we temporarily suppressed activity
in parts of the brain while people did tasks that measured their spatial bias. To
see if there was a link between systems, we then related these effects of TMS
on spatial bias to people’s intrinsic pseudoneglect.
As expected by previous studies, we found that TMS of the right parietal cortex
induced neglect-like behaviour – compared to a sham TMS condition (placebo), people bisected lines more to the right of centre, indicating that TMS caused a
subtle neglect of the left side of space. This effect lasted for an hour (upper figure on the left). But what was particularly striking
was that the effect only happened in the participants who already showed an
intrinsic pattern of left
pseudoneglect. In contrast, those with right
pseudoneglect at baseline were immune to the effects of TMS (lower figure on the left).
There were
a number of other aspects to the study too. We compared the effect of TMS using
two different methods of estimating bias, and we also asked whether the TMS influenced
people’s eye movements (it didn't). I won’t go into these details here but
the paper covers them in depth.
What do
these results mean? I think they have two implications. First, they provide evidence that neglect and pseudoneglect arise from
linked or common brain systems for representing space – and they provide
a biological substrate for this association in the right parietal cortex. Second, the
results provide a proof of principle that initial spatial biases can predict
subsequent effects of neurological interference. In theory, this could one day lead
to pre-diagnostic screening to determine whether a person is at risk of more severe neglect symptoms in the event of suffering a stroke.
All that said, we
need to be cautious. There is a world of difference between the subtle and
reversible effects of TMS and the dramatic effects of brain injury. We simply don't know whether
the predictive relationship found here would translate to patients – that
remains to be established. Also, our study had a small sample size, has yet to be
replicated, and provides no indication of diagnostic or prognostic utility. But
I think these preliminary results provide enough evidence that this avenue is
worth pursuing.
Open Access, Open Science, and Publishing Reform
Apart from
the science, our paper represents a milestone for my group in terms of our publishing
practices. This is our first article in PLOS ONE and our first publication in
an open access journal. Also, it is our first attempt at open science. Interested
readers can download our data and analyses from Figshare (linked here
and in the article
itself). I increasingly feel that
scientists like me who conduct research using public funds have an obligation
to make our articles and data publicly available.
This paper
also represents a turning point for me in terms of my attitude to scientific
publishing. We originally submitted this manuscript in 2012 to the journal Neuropsychologia, where it was rejected
because some of our results were statistically non-significant. Rejecting
papers on the basis of ‘imperfect’ results is harmful to science because it
enforces publication
bias and pushes authors to engage in a host
of questionable research practices to generate outcomes that are neat and eye-catching.
With some ‘finessing’ of the analyses, we could probably have published our
paper in a more ‘traditional’ outlet. But we decided to play a straight bat,
and when we were penalised for doing so I realised on a very personal level that
there was something deeply wrong with our publishing culture. As a consequence I severed
my relationship with Neuropsychologia.
A short
time later, I was contacted by Sergio Della Sala, the Editor-in-chief of Cortex, who read my open letter to Neuropsychologia. Sergio very kindly
offered me an associate editorship (never let it be said that blogging is a waste of time!) and together we built the Registered
Reports initiative. Our hope is that this new option for authors will help reform the incentive structure
of academic publishing. Since then we’ve been part of a growing movement
for change, alongside Perspectives on
Psychological Science and their outstanding Registered
Replications project, the Open Science Framework, and a special
issue at Frontiers in Cognition which has adopted a variant of the Cortex pre-registration model.
In early
June this year, Marcus
Munafò and I, together with more than 80 of our colleagues, published an
article in the Guardian
calling for Registered Reports to be offered by journals across the life
sciences. I’m delighted to report that the journal Attention, Perception and Psychophysics and
two other academic journals are now on the verge of launching their own Registered
Reports projects.
My small
part in this reform traces back to having this manuscript rejected by Neuropsychologia editor Jennifer
Coull in September 2012. So, in a very true sense, I owe Jennifer a debt of
gratitude for giving me the kick in the butt I needed. Sometimes rock bottom
can be a great launching pad.
___
I'm also working in the area of neglect and pseudoneglect. In the spirit of open science and method sharing have you come across the 'bumping task'? It's a really good real-world indicator of pseudoneglect where pen and paper tasks can fall down in my opinion. It's from a 2007 paper published by Nicholls and colleagues, entitled "Things that go bump in the right". Really elegant study.
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