Mechanisms underlying hemispatial neglect
- 1 February 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Annals of Neurology
- Vol. 5 (2) , 166-170
- https://doi.org/10.1002/ana.410050210
Abstract
If patients with left‐sided hemispatial neglect bisect lines incorrectly because hemianopia or sensory hemiinattention prevents them from seeing how far the line extends to the left, a strategy that ensures their seeing the left side of the line in their normal field should improve performance. If patients have hemispatial hypokinesia, moving the line toward the normal half of body space should improve performance.Six patients with left‐sided neglect from right hemisphere infarctions were required to identify a letter at either the right or the left end of a line before bisecting that line. The task was given with the lines placed at either the right, the center, or the left of the body midline.Performance in trials when subjects were required to look to the left before bisecting a line did not differ from when they were required to look right. Performance was significantly better when the line was placed to the right side of the body than to the left. These observations support the hypothesis that patients with hemispatial neglect have hemispatial hypokinesia. An alternative hypothesis is that these subjects had a hemispatial memory defect. Although they saw the left side of the line in their normal field, they were incapable of forming a stable trace and performed as if they did not see the left side of the line.Keywords
This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- Spatial compatibility and anatomical factors in simple and choice reaction timeNeuropsychologia, 1977
- The Occurrence of Visual Neglect in Patients With Unilateral Cerebral DiseaseCortex, 1976
- A simple test of visual neglectNeurology, 1973
- SIMPLE REACTION TIMES OF IPSILATERAL AND CONTRALATERAL HAND TO LATERALIZED VISUAL STIMULIBrain, 1971
- THE PERFORMANCE OF BRAIN-DAMAGED PATIENTS IN SPATIAL LOCALIZATION OF VISUAL AND TACTILE STIMULIBrain, 1971
- Hemispheric Contribution to Exploration of Space Through the Visual and Tactile ModalityCortex, 1970
- Patterns of Behavioral Deficit Associated with Visual Spatial NeglectCortex, 1969
- UNILATERAL “SPATIAL AGNOSIA” (“INATTENTION”)IN PATIENTS WITH CEREBRAL LESIONSBrain, 1956
- AMORPHOSYNTHESIS FROM LEFT PARIETAL LESIONArchives of Neurology & Psychiatry, 1954
- VISUAL DISORIENTATION WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO LESIONS OF THE RIGHT CEREBRAL HEMISPHEREBrain, 1941