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Journal Article

Citation

Hillis AE, Mordkoff JT, Caramazza A. Cortex 1999; 35(3): 433-442.

Affiliation

Department of Neurology, Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, MD 21287, USA. argye@JHMI.edu

Copyright

(Copyright © 1999, Masson Editeur)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

10440080

Abstract

We report performance by a patient, NG, with hemispatial neglect after nondominant stroke, in detecting briefly (200 msec) presented visual targets. NG's detection of targets (gaps in circles) was determined by the location of the target in the space in which stimuli appeared. Gaps on the neglected side of a circle at fixation were rarely detected when circles of uniform size were always presented at fixation. The same targets in the same location were detected far more often in blocks that also included targets presented on each side of the central circle, or in blocks that included larger target stimuli. In these blocks, the window of space in which stimuli appeared was larger, such that the target fell closer to the center of this "window". These results indicate that the spatial extent of attention, and of hemispatial neglect, can be modified on the the basis of expectations and task requirements.


Language: en

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