Effects of lesions of temporal-parietal junction on perceptual and attentional processing in humans
Open Access
- 1 October 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Society for Neuroscience in Journal of Neuroscience
- Vol. 8 (10) , 3757-3769
- https://doi.org/10.1523/jneurosci.08-10-03757.1988
Abstract
When stimuli with larger forms (global) containing smaller forms (local) are presented to subjects with large lesions in the right hemisphere, they are more likely to miss the global form than the local form, whereas subjects with large lesions in the left are more likely to miss the local than the global form. The present study tested whether the global/local impairment in subjects with posterior lesions was due to deficits in controlled attentional processes, passive perceptual processes, or both. Attentional control was examined by measuring reaction time changes when the probability of a target appearing at either the global or local level was varied. Patients with unilateral right or left lesions centered in temporal-parietal regions and age-matched controls served as subjects. Because neurophysiological and neuropsychological evidence have implicated temporal regions in visual discrimination and inferior parietal regions in the allocation of attention to locations in the visual field, patients with left hemisphere lesions were further subdivided into those with lesions centered in the superior temporal gyrus (LSTG) or rostral inferior parietal lobule (LIPL). Patients with right hemisphere injury could not be analogously subdivided. The results revealed that the LSTG group was able to control the allocation of attention to global and local levels normally, while the LIPL group was not. In contrast, the LSTG group showed a strong baseline reaction time advantage toward global targets, while normals and the LIPL group showed no advantage toward one level or the other. Finally, the perceptual component was affected differentially by lesions in the right hemisphere and LSTG, with lesions in the left favoring global targets and lesions in the right favoring local targets. These findings indicate that the hemispheric global/local asymmetry is due to a perceptual mechanism with a critical anatomical locus centered in the STG.This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- The processing of hierarchical stimuli: Effects of retinal locus, locational uncertainty, and stimulus identityPerception & Psychophysics, 1988
- Effect of Acute Alcohol on Attention and the Processing of Hierarchical PatternsAlcohol, Clinical and Experimental Research, 1987
- Cortical connections of visual area MT in the macaqueJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1986
- Multiple visual areas in the caudal superior temporal sulcus of the macaqueJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1986
- Hemispheric specialization of memory for visual hierarchical stimuliNeuropsychologia, 1986
- ‘Part-whole’ processing in unilateral brain- damaged patients: Dysfunction of hierarchical organizationNeuropsychologia, 1986
- Behavioral enhancement of visual responses in monkey cerebral cortex. I. Modulation in posterior parietal cortex related to selective visual attentionJournal of Neurophysiology, 1981
- Parietal lobe mechanisms for directed visual attentionJournal of Neurophysiology, 1977