Walsh & Hoyt: Balint's Syndrome and Related Visuospatial Disorders

  • Matthew Rizzo, M.D., F.A.A.N., Department of Neurological Sciences, University of Nebraska
Publication date
January 2005
Publisher
Spencer S. Eccles Health Sciences Library, University of Utah

Abstract

In 1909, Balint described a triad of visual defects in a man with bilateral hemispheric lesions. Foremost was an inability to perceive together at any one time the several items of a visual scene, which Balint interpreted as a ""spatial disorder of attention."" Holmes used the term ""visual disorientation"" to describe a similar deficit, whereas Wolpert coined the term ""simultanagnosia,"" the ""inability to interpret the totality of a picture scene despite preservation of ability to apprehend individual portions of the whole."" Balints patient was also unable to move the eyes voluntarily to objects of interest despite unrestricted eye rotations. Balint called this ""psychic paralysis of gaze,"" although other authors subsequently used such...

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