Title of article
Understanding the effects of moving visual stimuli on unilateral neglect following stroke
Author/Authors
Plummer، نويسنده , , Prudence and Dunai، نويسنده , , Judith and Morris، نويسنده , , Meg E.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages
10
From page
156
To page
165
Abstract
Moving visual stimuli have been shown to reduce unilateral neglect (ULN), however, the mechanisms underlying these effects remain poorly understood. This study compared lateralised and non-lateralised moving visual stimuli to investigate whether the spatial characteristics or general alerting properties of moving visual stimuli are responsible for reducing neglect. Post-stroke left neglect patients as well as healthy and patient control subjects were tested on a computerised line bisection task under six visual stimulus conditions. The key finding was that, relative to the no stimulus condition, leftward moving and left-sided moving visual stimuli shifted neglect patients’ bisection errors leftward while the non-lateralised random moving visual stimuli did not reduce neglect patients’ rightward bisection errors. The results provide evidence that spatial characteristics rather than general alerting properties of moving visual stimuli reduce rightward bisection errors in ULN. Moreover, the pattern of findings strongly supports the notion that moving visual stimuli reduce neglect by capturing attention and drawing it to a spatial location rather than by activating the attentional system via superior collicular neurons.
Keywords
Visuospatial neglect , Stroke , attention , Line bisection
Journal title
Brain and Cognition
Serial Year
2006
Journal title
Brain and Cognition
Record number
2249206
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