» Articles » PMID: 11099732

'Where' Depends on 'what': a Differential Functional Anatomy for Position Discrimination in One- Versus Two-dimensions

Overview
Specialties Neurology
Psychology
Date 2000 Dec 2
PMID 11099732
Citations 11
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Line bisection is widely used as a clinical test of spatial cognition in patients with left visuospatial neglect after right hemisphere lesion. Surprisingly, many neglect patients who show severe impairment on marking the center of horizontal lines can accurately mark the center of squares. That these patients with left neglect are also typically poor at judging whether lines are correctly prebisected implies that the deficit can be perceptual rather than motoric. These findings suggest a differential neural basis for one- and two-dimensional visual position discrimination that we investigated with functional neuroimaging (fMRI). Normal subjects judged whether, in premarked lines or squares, the mark was placed centrally. Line center judgements differentially activated right parietal cortex, while square center judgements differentially activated the lingual gyrus bilaterally. These distinct neural bases for one- and two-dimensional visuospatial judgements help explain the observed clinical dissociations by showing that as a stimulus becomes a better, more 'object-like' gestalt, the ventral visuoperceptive route assumes more responsibility for assessing position within the object.

Citing Articles

No Interaction between tDCS Current Strength and Baseline Performance: A Conceptual Replication.

Learmonth G, Felisatti F, Siriwardena N, Checketts M, Benwell C, Marker G Front Neurosci. 2017; 11:664.

PMID: 29249932 PMC: 5717015. DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2017.00664.


A rightward shift in the visuospatial attention vector with healthy aging.

Benwell C, Thut G, Grant A, Harvey M Front Aging Neurosci. 2014; 6:113.

PMID: 24959142 PMC: 4051195. DOI: 10.3389/fnagi.2014.00113.


Representational pseudoneglect: a review.

Brooks J, Della Sala S, Darling S Neuropsychol Rev. 2014; 24(2):148-65.

PMID: 24414221 DOI: 10.1007/s11065-013-9245-2.


Left-ear-driven representational pseudoneglect for mentally represented real-word scenes created from aural-verbal description.

Brooks J, Brandimonte M Cogn Process. 2013; 15(2):201-7.

PMID: 24317838 DOI: 10.1007/s10339-013-0591-z.


On the neural origin of pseudoneglect: EEG-correlates of shifts in line bisection performance with manipulation of line length.

Benwell C, Harvey M, Thut G Neuroimage. 2013; 86:370-80.

PMID: 24128738 PMC: 3980346. DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2013.10.014.