Apparent shift in visual field preference after unilateral stroke

Patients with either a left- or a right-hemisphere stroke lesion scored higher in tasks of word-picture matching and of nonverbal shape matching when information was presented tachistoscopically (120 msec) to the visual field (VF) projecting to their undamaged hemisphere. Left-hemisphere stroke pati...

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Veröffentlicht in:Brain and cognition 1988-06, Vol.7 (3), p.361-373
Hauptverfasser: Riege, Walter H., Metter, E.Jeffrey, Hanson, Wayne R.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Patients with either a left- or a right-hemisphere stroke lesion scored higher in tasks of word-picture matching and of nonverbal shape matching when information was presented tachistoscopically (120 msec) to the visual field (VF) projecting to their undamaged hemisphere. Left-hemisphere stroke patients ( n = 13) were dissociated from right-hemisphere stroke patients ( n = 15) by low word recognition from memory and by low right VF but nearly normal left VF accuracy in word-picture matching or shape matching; the former appeared to rely upon processing of word meaning by the right hemisphere. In contrast, right-stroke patients had higher right than left VF scores in both tasks, and their discrimination of nonverbal shapes via the right VF was not different from that of controls ( n = 15). Preferred processing by the the VF projecting to the undamaged hemisphere appeared as a shift in perceptual asymmetry but may indicate, in support of a “direct access” model, that each hemisphere responds more or less efficiently to word and to nonverbal shape discriminations.
ISSN:0278-2626
1090-2147
DOI:10.1016/0278-2626(88)90009-7