Literature DB >> 21692662

Spatial neglect and attention networks.

Maurizio Corbetta1, Gordon L Shulman.   

Abstract

Unilateral spatial neglect is a common neurological syndrome following predominantly right hemisphere injuries and is characterized by both spatial and non-spatial deficits. Core spatial deficits involve mechanisms for saliency coding, spatial attention, and short-term memory and occur in conjunction with nonspatial deficits that involve reorienting, target detection, and arousal/vigilance. We argue that neglect is better explained by the dysfunction of distributed cortical networks for the control of attention than by structural damage of specific brain regions. Ventral lesions in right parietal, temporal, and frontal cortex that cause neglect directly impair nonspatial functions partly mediated by a ventral frontoparietal attention network. Structural damage in ventral cortex also induces physiological abnormalities of task-evoked activity and functional connectivity in a dorsal frontoparietal network that controls spatial attention. The anatomy and right hemisphere dominance of neglect follow from the anatomy and laterality of the ventral regions that interact with the dorsal attention network.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21692662      PMCID: PMC3790661          DOI: 10.1146/annurev-neuro-061010-113731

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Annu Rev Neurosci        ISSN: 0147-006X            Impact factor:   12.449


  146 in total

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  353 in total

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