Patients with visual extinction were tested on three tasks involving stimulus iden-tification and localization. In the first experiment, in which patients were to iden-tify and localize stimuli, they demonstrated high levels of contralesional omissions. This primarily occurred under conditions of double simultaneous stimulation (DSS), consistent with the character of extinction. In contrast, when patients had to simply localize or count stimuli in Experiment 2, their contralesional omissions were very low. Similarly, when patients were to iden-tify stimuli without localizing them (Experiment 3) they again showed very low contralesional error rates. These results support the view (Baylis, Driver, & Rafal, 1993) that visual extinction may...
The phenomenon of extinction, which occurs frequently after unilateral brain damage, involves a fail...
Unilateral brain damage frequently produces ''extinction,'' in which patients can detect brief singl...
Milner and Goodale (The visual brain in action, Oxford Press, 1995) made a distinction between visio...
Patients with visual extinction were tested on three tasks involving stimulus iden-tification and lo...
Brain-damaged patients showing extinction are able to process stimuli presented on either hemispace,...
Extinction is an example of how stimulus selection may be affected by an imbalance in competition fo...
Neuroimaging studies investigated the attentional systems of the human brain revealing two networks,...
SUMMARY Visual extinction was studied in a patient with neglect from a right hemispheric lesion. Ext...
We report a case-study of YE, a 54-year-old person who suffered multiple shell injuries that caused ...
In the rich and complex visual environment that surrounds us, visual stimuli compete for attention i...
influential theory of visual processing suggests that only the ventral stream is directly associated...
In the present study, we demonstrate that parietal patients with visual extinction show enhanced awa...
Anti-extinction occurs when there is poor report of a single stimulus presented on the contralesiona...
Visual perception and awareness have strict limitations. We suggest that one source of these limitat...
Objective: Patients with visual extinction have difficulty detecting a single contralesional stimulu...
The phenomenon of extinction, which occurs frequently after unilateral brain damage, involves a fail...
Unilateral brain damage frequently produces ''extinction,'' in which patients can detect brief singl...
Milner and Goodale (The visual brain in action, Oxford Press, 1995) made a distinction between visio...
Patients with visual extinction were tested on three tasks involving stimulus iden-tification and lo...
Brain-damaged patients showing extinction are able to process stimuli presented on either hemispace,...
Extinction is an example of how stimulus selection may be affected by an imbalance in competition fo...
Neuroimaging studies investigated the attentional systems of the human brain revealing two networks,...
SUMMARY Visual extinction was studied in a patient with neglect from a right hemispheric lesion. Ext...
We report a case-study of YE, a 54-year-old person who suffered multiple shell injuries that caused ...
In the rich and complex visual environment that surrounds us, visual stimuli compete for attention i...
influential theory of visual processing suggests that only the ventral stream is directly associated...
In the present study, we demonstrate that parietal patients with visual extinction show enhanced awa...
Anti-extinction occurs when there is poor report of a single stimulus presented on the contralesiona...
Visual perception and awareness have strict limitations. We suggest that one source of these limitat...
Objective: Patients with visual extinction have difficulty detecting a single contralesional stimulu...
The phenomenon of extinction, which occurs frequently after unilateral brain damage, involves a fail...
Unilateral brain damage frequently produces ''extinction,'' in which patients can detect brief singl...
Milner and Goodale (The visual brain in action, Oxford Press, 1995) made a distinction between visio...