Literature DB >> 33584218

Is This Within Reach? Left but Not Right Brain Damage Affects Affordance Judgment Tendencies.

Jennifer Randerath1,2,3, Lisa Finkel1,2, Cheryl Shigaki4, Joe Burris4, Ashish Nanda5,6,7, Peter Hwang4, Scott H Frey3,4.   

Abstract

The ability to judge accurately whether or not an action can be accomplished successfully is critical for selecting appropriate response options that enable adaptive behaviors. Such affordance judgments are thought to rely on the perceived fit between environmental properties and knowledge of one's current physical capabilities. Little, however, is currently known about the ability of individuals to judge their own affordances following a stroke, or about the underlying neural mechanisms involved. To address these issues, we employed a signal detection approach to investigate the impact of left or right hemisphere injuries on judgments of whether a visual object was located within reach while remaining still (i.e., reachability). Regarding perceptual sensitivity and accuracy in judging reachability, there were no significant group differences between healthy controls (N = 29), right brain damaged (RBD, N = 17) and left brain damaged stroke patients (LBD, N = 17). However, while healthy controls and RBD patients demonstrated a negative response criterion and thus overestimated their reach capability, LBD patients' average response criterion converged to zero, indicating no judgment tendency. Critically, the LBD group's judgment tendency pattern is consistent with previous findings in this same sample on an affordance judgment task that required estimating whether the hand can fit through apertures (Randerath et al., 2018). Lesion analysis suggests that this loss of judgment tendency may be associated with damage to the left insula, the left parietal and middle temporal lobe. Based on these results, we propose that damage to the left ventro-dorsal stream disrupts the retrieval and processing of a stable criterion, leading to stronger reliance on intact on-line body-perceptive processes computed within the preserved bilateral dorsal network.
Copyright © 2021 Randerath, Finkel, Shigaki, Burris, Nanda, Hwang and Frey.

Entities:  

Keywords:  affordances; decision making; lesion analysis; perception action; reachability; stroke

Year:  2021        PMID: 33584218      PMCID: PMC7873490          DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2020.531893

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Front Hum Neurosci        ISSN: 1662-5161            Impact factor:   3.169


  69 in total

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Review 3.  Rehabilitation of neglect: an update.

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Review 5.  What puts the how in where? Tool use and the divided visual streams hypothesis.

Authors:  Scott H Frey
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Review 6.  The role of the anterior insula in adolescent decision making.

Authors:  Ashley R Smith; Laurence Steinberg; Jason Chein
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7.  Action strategies of older adults walking through apertures.

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8.  Stereotaxic display of brain lesions.

Authors:  Chris Rorden; Matthew Brett
Journal:  Behav Neurol       Date:  2000       Impact factor: 3.342

9.  The influence of athletic experience and kinematic information on skill-relevant affordance perception.

Authors:  Julie A Weast; Kevin Shockley; Michael A Riley
Journal:  Q J Exp Psychol (Hove)       Date:  2010-11-26       Impact factor: 2.143

10.  Defective pantomime of object use in left brain damage: apraxia or asymbolia?

Authors:  Georg Goldenberg; Karoline Hartmann; Isa Schlott
Journal:  Neuropsychologia       Date:  2003       Impact factor: 3.139

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