Phasic alerting of neglect patients overcomes their spatial deficit in visual awareness
Ian H. Robertson,
Jason B. Mattingley,
Chris Rorden and
Jon Driver
Additional contact information
Ian H. Robertson: MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit
Jason B. Mattingley: MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit
Chris Rorden: MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit
Jon Driver: Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience, University College London
Nature, 1998, vol. 395, issue 6698, 169-172
Abstract:
Abstract Patients with extensive damage to the right hemisphere of their brain often exhibit unilateral neglect of the left side of space. The spatial attention of these patients is strongly biased towards the right1, so their awareness of visual events on the left is impaired2. Extensive right-hemisphere lesions also impair tonic alertness (the ability to maintain arousal)3,4,5. This nonspatial deficit in alertness is often considered to be a different problem from spatial neglect5,6, but the two impairments may be linked7,8. If so, then phasically increasing the patients' alertness should temporarily ameliorate their spatial bias in awareness. Here we provide evidence to support this theory. Right-hemisphere-neglect patients judged whether a visual event on the left preceded or followed a comparable event on the right. They became aware of left events half a second later than right events on average. This spatial imbalance in the time course of visual awareness was corrected when a warning sound alerted the patients phasically. Even a warning sound on the right accelerated the perception of left visual events in this way. Nonspatial phasic alerting can thus overcome disabling spatial biases in perceptual awareness after brain injury.
Date: 1998
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DOI: 10.1038/25993
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