Developmental changes in mental rotation ability and visual perspective-taking in children and adults with Williams Syndrome

Williams syndrome (WS) is a genetic disorder caused by the partial deletion of chromosome 7. Individuals with WS have atypical cognitive abilities, such as hypersociability and compromised visuospatial cognition, although the mechanisms underlying these deficits, as well as the relationship between...

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Main Authors: Masahiro eHirai, Yukako eMuramatsu, Seiji eMizuno, Naoko eKurahashi, Hirokazu eKurahashi, Miho eNakamura
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2013-12-01
Series:Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnhum.2013.00856/full
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spelling doaj-7480b522a1724c3bbb2c13f912ae5e8d2020-11-25T03:49:40ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Human Neuroscience1662-51612013-12-01710.3389/fnhum.2013.0085662726Developmental changes in mental rotation ability and visual perspective-taking in children and adults with Williams SyndromeMasahiro eHirai0Masahiro eHirai1Yukako eMuramatsu2Seiji eMizuno3Naoko eKurahashi4Hirokazu eKurahashi5Miho eNakamura6Institute for Developmental Research, Aichi Human Service CenterJichi Medical UniversityInstitute for Developmental Research, Aichi Human Service CenterCentral Hospital, Aichi Human Service CenterCentral Hospital, Aichi Human Service CenterCentral Hospital, Aichi Human Service CenterInstitute for Developmental Research, Aichi Human Service CenterWilliams syndrome (WS) is a genetic disorder caused by the partial deletion of chromosome 7. Individuals with WS have atypical cognitive abilities, such as hypersociability and compromised visuospatial cognition, although the mechanisms underlying these deficits, as well as the relationship between them, remain unclear. Here, we assessed performance in mental rotation (MR) and level 2 visual perspective taking (VPT2) tasks in individuals with and without WS. Individuals with WS obtained lower scores in the VPT2 task than in the MR task. These individuals also performed poorly on both the MR and VPT2 tasks compared with members of a control group. For the individuals in the control group, performance scores improved during development for both tasks, while the scores of those in the WS group improved only in the MR task, and not the VPT2 task. Therefore, we conducted a second experiment to explore the specific cognitive challenges faced by people with WS in the VPT2 task. In addition to asking participants to change their physical location (self-motion), we also asked them to adopt a third-person perspective by imagining that they had moved to a specified location (self-motion imagery). This enabled us to assess their ability to simulate the movement of their own bodies. The performance in the control group improved in both the self-motion and self-motion imagery tasks and both performances were correlated with verbal mental age. However, we did not find any developmental changes in performance for either task in the WS group. Performance scores for the self-motion imagery task in the WS group were low, similar to the scores observed for the VPT2 in this population. These results suggest that MR and VPT2 tasks involve different processes, and that these processes develop differently in people with WS. Moreover, difficulty completing VPT2 tasks may be partly because of an inability of people with WS to accurately simulate mental body motion.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnhum.2013.00856/fullWilliams Syndromemental rotationChildrenreference framesVisual Perspective Takingdevelopmental trajectory
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Masahiro eHirai
Masahiro eHirai
Yukako eMuramatsu
Seiji eMizuno
Naoko eKurahashi
Hirokazu eKurahashi
Miho eNakamura
spellingShingle Masahiro eHirai
Masahiro eHirai
Yukako eMuramatsu
Seiji eMizuno
Naoko eKurahashi
Hirokazu eKurahashi
Miho eNakamura
Developmental changes in mental rotation ability and visual perspective-taking in children and adults with Williams Syndrome
Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
Williams Syndrome
mental rotation
Children
reference frames
Visual Perspective Taking
developmental trajectory
author_facet Masahiro eHirai
Masahiro eHirai
Yukako eMuramatsu
Seiji eMizuno
Naoko eKurahashi
Hirokazu eKurahashi
Miho eNakamura
author_sort Masahiro eHirai
title Developmental changes in mental rotation ability and visual perspective-taking in children and adults with Williams Syndrome
title_short Developmental changes in mental rotation ability and visual perspective-taking in children and adults with Williams Syndrome
title_full Developmental changes in mental rotation ability and visual perspective-taking in children and adults with Williams Syndrome
title_fullStr Developmental changes in mental rotation ability and visual perspective-taking in children and adults with Williams Syndrome
title_full_unstemmed Developmental changes in mental rotation ability and visual perspective-taking in children and adults with Williams Syndrome
title_sort developmental changes in mental rotation ability and visual perspective-taking in children and adults with williams syndrome
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
issn 1662-5161
publishDate 2013-12-01
description Williams syndrome (WS) is a genetic disorder caused by the partial deletion of chromosome 7. Individuals with WS have atypical cognitive abilities, such as hypersociability and compromised visuospatial cognition, although the mechanisms underlying these deficits, as well as the relationship between them, remain unclear. Here, we assessed performance in mental rotation (MR) and level 2 visual perspective taking (VPT2) tasks in individuals with and without WS. Individuals with WS obtained lower scores in the VPT2 task than in the MR task. These individuals also performed poorly on both the MR and VPT2 tasks compared with members of a control group. For the individuals in the control group, performance scores improved during development for both tasks, while the scores of those in the WS group improved only in the MR task, and not the VPT2 task. Therefore, we conducted a second experiment to explore the specific cognitive challenges faced by people with WS in the VPT2 task. In addition to asking participants to change their physical location (self-motion), we also asked them to adopt a third-person perspective by imagining that they had moved to a specified location (self-motion imagery). This enabled us to assess their ability to simulate the movement of their own bodies. The performance in the control group improved in both the self-motion and self-motion imagery tasks and both performances were correlated with verbal mental age. However, we did not find any developmental changes in performance for either task in the WS group. Performance scores for the self-motion imagery task in the WS group were low, similar to the scores observed for the VPT2 in this population. These results suggest that MR and VPT2 tasks involve different processes, and that these processes develop differently in people with WS. Moreover, difficulty completing VPT2 tasks may be partly because of an inability of people with WS to accurately simulate mental body motion.
topic Williams Syndrome
mental rotation
Children
reference frames
Visual Perspective Taking
developmental trajectory
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnhum.2013.00856/full
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