The importance of stimulus qualities such as orientation, motion and luminance in blindsight are well known but their cortical basis has been much less explored. We therefore studied the performance of two blindsighted hemianopic subjects (GY and MS), in a task in which the subject had to decide in which of two adjunctive intervals a pattern of global spots moved coherently, at a variety of speeds, in the hemianopic field. Their ability was compared with that of two control subjects with normal vision. Both hemianopes performed this simple discrimination well in their blind fields but their performance was impaired by repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) applied over cortical area hV5/MT(+) although not, or only slightly, by ...
Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) can be used to simulate the effects of highly circumscribed ...
Motion area V5/MT+ response to global motion in the absence of V1 resembles early visual cortex Sara...
Patients lacking a cerebral hemisphere are of obvious interest in the debate over the role of extras...
The importance of stimulus qualities such as orientation, motion and luminance in blindsight are wel...
Blindsight patients can detect fast moving stimuli presented within their blind field even when they...
Unilateral damage to post-chiasmatic visual pathways or cortical areas results in the loss of vision...
Moving stimuli are the most effective of all in eliciting blindsight. The detection of static lumina...
Blindsight is the ability of some cortically blind patients to discriminate visual events presented ...
Blindsight has been widely investigated and its properties documented. One property still debated an...
The ability to detect the motion of objects is critical to survival, and understanding the cortical ...
A lesion of striate cortex, area V1, produces blindness in the retinotopically corresponding part of...
Several published single case studies reveal a double dissociation between the effects of brain dama...
Several published single case studies reveal a double dissociation between the effects of brain dama...
Some patients with brain damage affecting the striate cortex, though clinically blind in their field...
Some patients with damaged striate cortex have blindsight-the ability to discriminate unseen stimuli...
Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) can be used to simulate the effects of highly circumscribed ...
Motion area V5/MT+ response to global motion in the absence of V1 resembles early visual cortex Sara...
Patients lacking a cerebral hemisphere are of obvious interest in the debate over the role of extras...
The importance of stimulus qualities such as orientation, motion and luminance in blindsight are wel...
Blindsight patients can detect fast moving stimuli presented within their blind field even when they...
Unilateral damage to post-chiasmatic visual pathways or cortical areas results in the loss of vision...
Moving stimuli are the most effective of all in eliciting blindsight. The detection of static lumina...
Blindsight is the ability of some cortically blind patients to discriminate visual events presented ...
Blindsight has been widely investigated and its properties documented. One property still debated an...
The ability to detect the motion of objects is critical to survival, and understanding the cortical ...
A lesion of striate cortex, area V1, produces blindness in the retinotopically corresponding part of...
Several published single case studies reveal a double dissociation between the effects of brain dama...
Several published single case studies reveal a double dissociation between the effects of brain dama...
Some patients with brain damage affecting the striate cortex, though clinically blind in their field...
Some patients with damaged striate cortex have blindsight-the ability to discriminate unseen stimuli...
Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) can be used to simulate the effects of highly circumscribed ...
Motion area V5/MT+ response to global motion in the absence of V1 resembles early visual cortex Sara...
Patients lacking a cerebral hemisphere are of obvious interest in the debate over the role of extras...