Literature DB >> 11684161

Effects of visible and invisible cueing on line bisection and Landmark performance in hemispatial neglect.

Bettina Olk1, Monika Harvey.   

Abstract

A total of 12 patients with hemispatial neglect (and two control groups) were tested to examine the effects of lateralized cues on line bisection and Landmark judgements. The experiment was designed to investigate whether bisection and landmark biases induced by cueing are simply a result of a direct perceptual lengthening of the cued part of the line caused by the fact that the cue is visible, thus creating a composite 'line plus cue' or whether cueing indeed induces an attentional bias. Secondly, earlier work by Harvey et al. [Harvey M, Milner AD, Roberts RC. An investigation of hemispatial neglect using the landmark task, Brain and Cognition 1995; 27: 59-78] has shown that in neglect patients cues work by inducing orientational biases rather than via the alteration of subjective length perception. An attempt was made to replicate this finding and extend it to cues that are not physically present. The bisection data clearly showed that cues bias attention rather than work via a direct lengthening of the line: both visible and invisible cues biased bisection performance equally well. The Landmark data, however, revealed much less clear-cut results and we failed to repeat the earlier observation by Harvey et al. that cues induce orientational biases. Even when the neglect patients were categorised into premotor and perceptual categories a clear effect failed to emerge. It is hypothesised that the earlier reported effect may be linked to neglect severity rather than to perceptual type neglect.

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Mesh:

Year:  2002        PMID: 11684161     DOI: 10.1016/s0028-3932(01)00095-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neuropsychologia        ISSN: 0028-3932            Impact factor:   3.139


  5 in total

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

Authors:  Christopher S Y Benwell; Monika Harvey; Gregor Thut
Journal:  Neuroimage       Date:  2013-10-12       Impact factor: 6.556

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

Authors:  Christopher S Y Benwell; Gregor Thut; Ashley Grant; Monika Harvey
Journal:  Front Aging Neurosci       Date:  2014-06-10       Impact factor: 5.750

4.  Prismatic Adaptation Induces Plastic Changes onto Spatial and Temporal Domains in Near and Far Space.

Authors:  Ivan Patané; Alessandro Farnè; Francesca Frassinetti
Journal:  Neural Plast       Date:  2016-02-14       Impact factor: 3.599

5.  Intra- and inter-task reliability of spatial attention measures in healthy older adults.

Authors:  Gesine Märker; Gemma Learmonth; Gregor Thut; Monika Harvey
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2019-12-23       Impact factor: 3.240

  5 in total

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