Turning the trunk or head to the left can reduce the severity of leftward neglect. This study sought to determine whether turning the trunk or head to the right would reduce pseudoneglect: A phenomenon where normal participants underestimate the rightward features of a stimulus. Participants made luminance judgements of two mirror-reversed greyscales stimuli. A preference for selecting the stimulus dark on the left was found. The effect of trunk-centred coordinates was examined in Expt. I by facing the head toward the display and turning the trunk to the left, right or toward the display. Head-centred coordinates were examined in Expt. 2 by directing the eyes toward the display and then turning the head and trunk. No effect of rotation was ...
The neglect of leftward space occurring after a right parietal lesion, known as hemispatial neglect,...
AbstractA bias for humans to attend to the left side of space has been reported in a variety of expe...
Past research shows that in drawn or photographic portraits, people are significantly more likely to...
The purpose of this study was to resolve a paradox in the literature on the effects of body orientat...
The purpose of this study was to resolve a paradox in the literature on the effects of body orientat...
Neurologically normal individuals exhibit leftward spatial biases, resulting from object- and space-...
Two experiments examine the relationship between free-viewing vertical and horizontal perceptual bia...
Pseudoneglect refers to a tendency of neurologically healthy individuals to produce leftward percept...
Neurologically normal individuals demonstrate a reliable bias to the left side of space, known as ps...
Neurologically normal individuals devote more attention to the left side; an asymmetry known as pseu...
© 2012 Dr. Joanne S. RobertsonUnilateral spatial neglect is a neuropsychological disorder characteri...
Studies of neglect patients have suggested that egocentric coordinates may play an important role in...
In patients with right brain damage and left visual neglect, attention tends to be captured by right...
Pseudoneglect is the tendency for the general population to over-attend to the left. While pseudoneg...
<div><p>People usually see things using frontal viewing, and avoid lateral viewing (or eccentric gaz...
The neglect of leftward space occurring after a right parietal lesion, known as hemispatial neglect,...
AbstractA bias for humans to attend to the left side of space has been reported in a variety of expe...
Past research shows that in drawn or photographic portraits, people are significantly more likely to...
The purpose of this study was to resolve a paradox in the literature on the effects of body orientat...
The purpose of this study was to resolve a paradox in the literature on the effects of body orientat...
Neurologically normal individuals exhibit leftward spatial biases, resulting from object- and space-...
Two experiments examine the relationship between free-viewing vertical and horizontal perceptual bia...
Pseudoneglect refers to a tendency of neurologically healthy individuals to produce leftward percept...
Neurologically normal individuals demonstrate a reliable bias to the left side of space, known as ps...
Neurologically normal individuals devote more attention to the left side; an asymmetry known as pseu...
© 2012 Dr. Joanne S. RobertsonUnilateral spatial neglect is a neuropsychological disorder characteri...
Studies of neglect patients have suggested that egocentric coordinates may play an important role in...
In patients with right brain damage and left visual neglect, attention tends to be captured by right...
Pseudoneglect is the tendency for the general population to over-attend to the left. While pseudoneg...
<div><p>People usually see things using frontal viewing, and avoid lateral viewing (or eccentric gaz...
The neglect of leftward space occurring after a right parietal lesion, known as hemispatial neglect,...
AbstractA bias for humans to attend to the left side of space has been reported in a variety of expe...
Past research shows that in drawn or photographic portraits, people are significantly more likely to...