Spatial neglect in near and far space investigated by repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation.

Localized repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation was used to disrupt visuospatial perception in the near and far space of six healthy volunteer subjects. In addition to the baseline condition, they were stimulated over the right posterior parietal cortex, the right or left dorsal occipital cor...

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Main Authors: Bjoertomt, O, Cowey, A, Walsh, V
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 2002
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author Bjoertomt, O
Cowey, A
Walsh, V
author_facet Bjoertomt, O
Cowey, A
Walsh, V
author_sort Bjoertomt, O
collection OXFORD
description Localized repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation was used to disrupt visuospatial perception in the near and far space of six healthy volunteer subjects. In addition to the baseline condition, they were stimulated over the right posterior parietal cortex, the right or left dorsal occipital cortex or the right ventral occipital cortex, during the brief presentation of a transected horizontal line. Subjects had to indicate whether the part of the line to the left or right of the transection appeared longer. The stimulus display was back-projected on a screen at a viewing distance of either 50 or 150 cm ("near" and "far" space, respectively). Reaction times and choices were measured. In a forced-choice paradigm, subjects showed "pseudoneglect", the natural tendency of neurologically intact subjects to perceive the left side of a centrally transected line as slightly longer than the right. These errors occurred more for lines in near space than for lines in far space. Magnetic stimulation of the right posterior parietal cortex or the right ventral occipital lobe selectively induced a significant shift to the right in the perceived midpoint for near- and far-space lines, respectively. The results reproduced in normal subjects the dissociation between neglect in near and far space that has been described in patients with different right-hemisphere lesions. This dissociation supports the contention that there is a dorsal/near space-ventral/far space segregation of processing in the visual system which reflects the behavioural goals of the two putative visual streams.
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spelling oxford-uuid:873522a9-2028-4f20-bf76-517bff77f4312022-03-26T22:09:13ZSpatial neglect in near and far space investigated by repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:873522a9-2028-4f20-bf76-517bff77f431EnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2002Bjoertomt, OCowey, AWalsh, VLocalized repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation was used to disrupt visuospatial perception in the near and far space of six healthy volunteer subjects. In addition to the baseline condition, they were stimulated over the right posterior parietal cortex, the right or left dorsal occipital cortex or the right ventral occipital cortex, during the brief presentation of a transected horizontal line. Subjects had to indicate whether the part of the line to the left or right of the transection appeared longer. The stimulus display was back-projected on a screen at a viewing distance of either 50 or 150 cm ("near" and "far" space, respectively). Reaction times and choices were measured. In a forced-choice paradigm, subjects showed "pseudoneglect", the natural tendency of neurologically intact subjects to perceive the left side of a centrally transected line as slightly longer than the right. These errors occurred more for lines in near space than for lines in far space. Magnetic stimulation of the right posterior parietal cortex or the right ventral occipital lobe selectively induced a significant shift to the right in the perceived midpoint for near- and far-space lines, respectively. The results reproduced in normal subjects the dissociation between neglect in near and far space that has been described in patients with different right-hemisphere lesions. This dissociation supports the contention that there is a dorsal/near space-ventral/far space segregation of processing in the visual system which reflects the behavioural goals of the two putative visual streams.
spellingShingle Bjoertomt, O
Cowey, A
Walsh, V
Spatial neglect in near and far space investigated by repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation.
title Spatial neglect in near and far space investigated by repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation.
title_full Spatial neglect in near and far space investigated by repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation.
title_fullStr Spatial neglect in near and far space investigated by repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation.
title_full_unstemmed Spatial neglect in near and far space investigated by repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation.
title_short Spatial neglect in near and far space investigated by repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation.
title_sort spatial neglect in near and far space investigated by repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation
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AT walshv spatialneglectinnearandfarspaceinvestigatedbyrepetitivetranscranialmagneticstimulation