Differential Effects of Unilateral Temporal Lobectomy on Visuospatial Memory and Attention
- 1 November 1991
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology
- Vol. 13 (6) , 965-971
- https://doi.org/10.1080/01688639108405111
Abstract
We investigated free recall of visuospatial arrays in a free-field format in epileptic patients following unilateral temporal lobectomy (TL) (left = 15, right = 17). TL patients exhibited leftward deviation in right hemispace, but more variable response in left hemispace, a pattern that has been observed in healthy adults. This finding is postulated to result from combined preferential right cerebral activation and a tendency to err toward peri-personal space. Temporal lobectomy affected overall leftward deviation by initially shifting deviation more toward the side of lesion. The initial directional shift in immediate memory dissipated over time suggesting that these subtle attentional shifts may be compensated by learning. Consistent with differential cerebral hemispheric mechanisms, absolute vertical errors were greater in right than left TL patients, and absolute horizontal errors were worse in right hemispace.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Unilateral Neglect of Representational SpacePublished by Elsevier ,2013
- Anterograde Memory for Visuospatial ArraysInternational Journal of Neuroscience, 1990
- Right hippocampal impairment in the recall of spatial location: Encoding deficit or rapid forgetting?Neuropsychologia, 1989
- The role of the right hippocampus in the recall of spatial locationNeuropsychologia, 1981
- Pseudoneglect: Effects of hemispace on a tactile line bisection taskNeuropsychologia, 1980
- Tactile perception of direction in relation to handedness and familial handednessNeuropsychologia, 1975
- Eye and Head Turning Indicates Cerebral LateralizationScience, 1972
- Visual recognition and recall after right temporal-lobe excision in manNeuropsychologia, 1968
- Tactually-guided maze learning in man: Effects of unilateral cortical excisions and bilateral hippocampal lesionsNeuropsychologia, 1965
- Visually-guided maze learning in man: Effects of bilateral hippocampal, bilateral frontal, and unilateral cerebral lesionsNeuropsychologia, 1965