Literature DB >> 19818210

Functional and anatomical profile of visual motion impairments in stroke patients correlate with fMRI in normal subjects.

Lucia M Vaina1, Elif M Sikoglu, Sergei Soloviev, Marjorie LeMay, Salvatore Squatrito, Gabriella Pandiani, Alan Cowey.   

Abstract

We used six psychophysical tasks to measure sensitivity to different types of global motion in 45 healthy adults and in 57 stroke patients who had recovered from the initial results of the stroke, but a large subset of them had enduring deficits on selective visual motion perception tasks. The patients were divided into four groups on the basis of the location of their cortical lesion: occipito-temporal, occipito-parietal, rostro-dorsal parietal, or frontal-prefrontal. The six tasks were: direction discrimination, speed discrimination, motion coherence, motion discontinuity, two-dimensional form-from-motion, and motion coherence - radial. We found both qualitative and quantitative differences among the motion impairments in the four groups: patients with frontal lesions or occipito-temporal lesions were not impaired on any task. The other two groups had substantial impairments, most severe in the group with occipito-parietal damage. We also tested eight healthy control subjects on the same tasks while they were scanned by functional magnetic resonance imaging. The BOLD signal provoked by the different tasks correlated well with the locus of the lesions that led to impairments among the different tasks. The results highlight the advantage of using psychophysical techniques and a variety of visual tasks with neurological patients to tease apart the contribution of different cortical areas to motion processing.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19818210      PMCID: PMC2935516          DOI: 10.1348/174866409X471760

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neuropsychol        ISSN: 1748-6645            Impact factor:   2.864


  65 in total

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Review 2.  First-order and second-order motion: neurological evidence for neuroanatomically distinct systems.

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Journal:  Prog Brain Res       Date:  2004       Impact factor: 2.453

3.  A unified statistical approach for determining significant signals in images of cerebral activation.

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4.  Unilateral right parietal damage leads to bilateral deficit for high-level motion.

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Journal:  Neuron       Date:  2001-12-20       Impact factor: 17.173

Review 5.  Functional specialization for visual motion processing in primate cerebral cortex.

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Journal:  Cereb Cortex       Date:  1997 Oct-Nov       Impact factor: 5.357

9.  Object-related activity revealed by functional magnetic resonance imaging in human occipital cortex.

Authors:  R Malach; J B Reppas; R R Benson; K K Kwong; H Jiang; W A Kennedy; P J Ledden; T J Brady; B R Rosen; R B Tootell
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  1995-08-29       Impact factor: 11.205

10.  Selective visual responses to expansion and rotation in the human MT complex revealed by functional magnetic resonance imaging adaptation.

Authors:  Matthew B Wall; Angelika Lingnau; Hiroshi Ashida; Andrew T Smith
Journal:  Eur J Neurosci       Date:  2008-05       Impact factor: 3.386

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  8 in total

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Review 4.  The contribution of LM to the neuroscience of movement vision.

Authors:  Josef Zihl; Charles A Heywood
Journal:  Front Integr Neurosci       Date:  2015-02-17

5.  Stochastic resonance enhances the rate of evidence accumulation during combined brain stimulation and perceptual decision-making.

Authors:  Onno van der Groen; Matthew F Tang; Nicole Wenderoth; Jason B Mattingley
Journal:  PLoS Comput Biol       Date:  2018-07-18       Impact factor: 4.475

6.  Altered steering strategies for goal-directed locomotion in stroke.

Authors:  Ala' S Aburub; Anouk Lamontagne
Journal:  J Neuroeng Rehabil       Date:  2013-07-22       Impact factor: 4.262

7.  Diffusion tensor and volumetric magnetic resonance imaging using an MR-compatible hand-induced robotic device suggests training-induced neuroplasticity in patients with chronic stroke.

Authors:  Asimina Lazaridou; Loukas Astrakas; Dionyssios Mintzopoulos; Azadeh Khanicheh; Aneesh B Singhal; Michael A Moskowitz; Bruce Rosen; Aria A Tzika
Journal:  Int J Mol Med       Date:  2013-08-27       Impact factor: 4.101

8.  Select and Cluster: A Method for Finding Functional Networks of Clustered Voxels in fMRI.

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Journal:  Comput Intell Neurosci       Date:  2016-09-05
  8 in total

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