Line bisection and unilateral visual neglect in patients with neurologic impairment
- 1 May 1980
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Neurology
- Vol. 30 (5) , 509
- https://doi.org/10.1212/wnl.30.5.509
Abstract
Unilateral visual neglect is a common symptom or sign in patients with lesions of the nondominant hemisphere. Several techniques have been used to demonstrate visual neglect. One such technique—asking a patient to bisect a horizontal line and expecting an estimate of center away from the side neglected—has been used for over 70 years but has not been statistically evaluated. We conducted a formal evaulation of this method and found that under special conditions, line-bisection performance can discriminate between patients with right-hemisphere lesions and patients with diffuse lesions, patients with left-hemisphere lesions, and hospital controls. When used to investigate visual neglect in an individual patient, the line-bisection test should be given in conjunction with other complementary procedures such as symmetric drawings and the Memory-for-Designs Test.This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Studies on the Functional Organization of the Minor HemisphereInternational Journal of Mental Health, 1972
- Les Manifestations De Negligence et D'inattention Pour L'hemispaceCortex, 1968
- MEMORY-FOR-DESIGNS TEST: REVISED GENERAL MANUALPublished by SAGE Publications ,1960
- VISUAL-CONSTRUCTIVE DISABILITIES ASSOCIATED WITH LESIONS OF THE LEFT CEREBRAL HEMISPHEREBrain, 1960
- UNILATERAL “SPATIAL AGNOSIA” (“INATTENTION”)IN PATIENTS WITH CEREBRAL LESIONSBrain, 1956
- VISUAL DISORIENTATION WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO LESIONS OF THE RIGHT CEREBRAL HEMISPHEREBrain, 1941