A group of 55 patients with homonymous field defects related to vascular or traumatic postgeniculate damage were trained by locating light targets presented within their blind field region. This systematic treatment led, in the majority of patients, to an enlargement of the visual field. Recovery depended on specific practice. Control experiments showed that field enlargement cannot be explained by eccentric fixation or perimetric measurement variability. It is hypothesized that recovery may take place at striate cortex level and may result from 'reactivation ' of reversibly damaged nervous tissue. In cases that did not benefit from treatment, visual field loss may result from irreversible damage
Visual information transmission flows from the retinal ganglion cells to the lateral geniculate nucl...
Damage to the primary visual cortex (V1) or its immediate afferents results in a loss of conscious v...
I. Anatomic Background II. Patterns of Field Defects A. Central scotomas B. Arcuate scotomas c. Alti...
Damage along the visual pathway results in a visual field defect (scotoma), which retinotopically co...
Homonymous visual field loss is a common consequence of stroke and traumatic brain injury. It is ass...
Injury to the primary visual cortex (V1) typically leads to loss of conscious vision in the correspo...
Purpose: Vision restoration training (VRT) in hemianopia patients leads to visual field enlargements...
Visual field deficit (VFD) is one of the most commonly observed symptoms following brain injury. Per...
PURPOSE: Damage along the visual pathway results in a visual field defect (scotoma), which retinotop...
AbstractVisual field deficit (VFD) is one of the most commonly observed symptoms following brain inj...
Purpose: Damage along the visual pathway results in a visual field defect (scotoma), which retinotop...
Cortical damage of the visual pathway as a result of stroke typically leads to a loss of conscious v...
Damage to the primary visual cortex (V1) as a result of stroke or other brain diseases can lead to a...
Introduction: Patients suffering from visual field defects caused by optic nerve or post-chiasmatic ...
There is extensive controversy over whether the adult visual cortex is able to reorganize following ...
Visual information transmission flows from the retinal ganglion cells to the lateral geniculate nucl...
Damage to the primary visual cortex (V1) or its immediate afferents results in a loss of conscious v...
I. Anatomic Background II. Patterns of Field Defects A. Central scotomas B. Arcuate scotomas c. Alti...
Damage along the visual pathway results in a visual field defect (scotoma), which retinotopically co...
Homonymous visual field loss is a common consequence of stroke and traumatic brain injury. It is ass...
Injury to the primary visual cortex (V1) typically leads to loss of conscious vision in the correspo...
Purpose: Vision restoration training (VRT) in hemianopia patients leads to visual field enlargements...
Visual field deficit (VFD) is one of the most commonly observed symptoms following brain injury. Per...
PURPOSE: Damage along the visual pathway results in a visual field defect (scotoma), which retinotop...
AbstractVisual field deficit (VFD) is one of the most commonly observed symptoms following brain inj...
Purpose: Damage along the visual pathway results in a visual field defect (scotoma), which retinotop...
Cortical damage of the visual pathway as a result of stroke typically leads to a loss of conscious v...
Damage to the primary visual cortex (V1) as a result of stroke or other brain diseases can lead to a...
Introduction: Patients suffering from visual field defects caused by optic nerve or post-chiasmatic ...
There is extensive controversy over whether the adult visual cortex is able to reorganize following ...
Visual information transmission flows from the retinal ganglion cells to the lateral geniculate nucl...
Damage to the primary visual cortex (V1) or its immediate afferents results in a loss of conscious v...
I. Anatomic Background II. Patterns of Field Defects A. Central scotomas B. Arcuate scotomas c. Alti...