The effect of rotating random dot motion on visuospatial line orientation in patients with right-sided stroke
Autor: | Stefan Reinhart, Helmut Hildebrandt, Ingo Keller, Anna-Katharina Schaadt, Georg Kerkhoff, Kathrin S. Utz |
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Rok vydání: | 2016 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Male medicine.medical_specialty Rotation Cognitive Neuroscience media_common.quotation_subject Motion Perception Experimental and Cognitive Psychology Neuropsychological Tests Audiology Functional Laterality 050105 experimental psychology Neglect Perceptual Disorders 03 medical and health sciences Behavioral Neuroscience 0302 clinical medicine RDM Orientation (geometry) medicine Humans 0501 psychology and cognitive sciences Clockwise Stroke Aged media_common Analysis of Variance Communication business.industry 05 social sciences Brain Oblique case Middle Aged medicine.disease Space Perception Female Line (text file) Psychology business Tilt (camera) Photic Stimulation 030217 neurology & neurosurgery |
Zdroj: | Neuropsychologia. 92:167-173 |
ISSN: | 0028-3932 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2016.05.030 |
Popis: | Spatial deficits are frequent after brain damage, particularly right hemisphere stroke. Visual judgments of line orientation (LINE) are often impaired after right parietal lesions. Perception of line orientation is an important visuoperceptual component of visuoconstructive capacities. Yet, little is known about modulating factors in LINE and effective treatments are rare for this disorder. Studies in patients with spatial neglect show that horizontal random dot motion (RDM) significantly modulates horizontal spatial disorders, both transiently and permanently after treatment. In the current study, we investigated whether rotational RDM modulates judgements in an oblique LINE task in 20 patients with right-hemispheric first ever stroke (10 of them with a disorder in LINE and 10 without such a disorder), and 10 healthy, age-matched subjects. Subjects were tested under three experimental conditions: (1) with a static background of small white dots, (2) with slow clockwise or (3) counterclockwise circular RDM of these background stimuli, while they performed the LINE task. In the baseline condition with static background, the impaired patient group showed a significant counterclockwise tilt. Clockwise rotating RDM normalized this deficit transiently but completely, while counterclockwise rotating RDM slightly aggravated it, though not significantly. Tilts in the LINE task were significantly correlated with left visuospatial neglect. Similar but much smaller effects were obtained in the spatially unimpaired patients and the normal controls. These results show that rotational RDM modulates deficits of line orientation in patients with right-sided stroke, possibly by influencing higher spatial representations devoted to the perception of oblique lines. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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