Impaired Incentive Learning in Treated Parkinson's Disease
D Charbonneau, RJ Riopelle and RJ Beninger

Abstract:
Objective: To quantify the performance
of patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) in incentive learning,
or learning to respond to stimuli that signal the imminent presentation
of a reinforcer, and in paired-associate learning, or learning
of word associations. Methods: The performance
of 32 patients with idiopathic PD was compared to that of 25
healthy control subjects, and 32 subjects suffering from arthritis,
matched for age and education. The PD and arthritic groups were
comparable on a self-report measure of physical disability.
All subjects were physically capable of satisfying the contingencies
of the incentive learning task. The avoidance task that quantified
incentive learning used money loss as an aversive stimulus.
The word paired-associate learning task was presented on a computer
and feedback was not given on performance. Results:
The normal and arthritic groups performed equally well on the
avoidance task, whereas the PD group was impaired despite dopaminergic
replacement therapy. The groups did not differ significantly
in paired-associate learning. Conclusions: These
findings are among the first to suggest that the nigrostriatal
dopamine dysfunction associated with PD may play a role in incentive
learning but not in paired-associate learning and are consistent
with a role for dopamine in certain forms of learning and memory.
The findings may highlight differences between tonic and modulated
function in the nigrostriatal system.
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Can.
J. Neurol. Sci. 1996; 23: 271-278
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