Spatial neglect is a perplexing neuropsychological syndrome, in which patients fail to detect (and/or respond to) stimuli located contralaterally to their (most often right) hemispheric lesion. Neglect is characterized by a wide heterogeneity, and a role for multiple components has been suggested, but the exact nature of the critical components remains unclear. Moreover, many different lesion sites have been reported, leading to enduring controversies about the relative contribution of different cortical and/or subcortical brain regions. Here we report a systematic anatomo-functional study of 80 patients with a focal right hemisphere stroke, who were examined by a series of neuropsychological tests assessing different clinical manifestation...
A major challenge for any anatomical study of spatial neglect in neurological patients is that human...
International audienceThe exact anatomical localization of right hemisphere lesions that lead to lef...
The critical lesion site responsible for the syndrome of unilateral spatial neglect has been debated...
Spatial neglect is a perplexing neuropsychological syndrome, in which patients fail to detect (and/o...
International audienceVisual neglect is a heterogeneous, multi-component syndrome resulting from rig...
Spatial neglect is a neuropsychological syndrome in which patients fail to perceive and orient to st...
Several cortical and sub-cortical regions in the right hemisphere, particularly in parietal and fron...
The pathophysiology of neuropsychological disorders due to right deep-seated hemispheric lesions rem...
grantor: University of TorontoHemispatial neglect, characterized as failure to attend to c...
Unilateral visual neglect is commonly defined as impaired ability to attend to stimuli presented on ...
Unilateral visual neglect is commonly defined as impaired ability to attend to stimuli presented on ...
The exact anatomical localization of right hemisphere lesions that lead to left spatial neglect is s...
Unilateral visual neglect is commonly defined as impaired ability to attend to stimuli presented on ...
The exact anatomical localization of right hemisphere lesions that lead to left spatial neglect is s...
Systematic individual neuroanatomical (MRI) and neuropsychological investigations were conducted for...
A major challenge for any anatomical study of spatial neglect in neurological patients is that human...
International audienceThe exact anatomical localization of right hemisphere lesions that lead to lef...
The critical lesion site responsible for the syndrome of unilateral spatial neglect has been debated...
Spatial neglect is a perplexing neuropsychological syndrome, in which patients fail to detect (and/o...
International audienceVisual neglect is a heterogeneous, multi-component syndrome resulting from rig...
Spatial neglect is a neuropsychological syndrome in which patients fail to perceive and orient to st...
Several cortical and sub-cortical regions in the right hemisphere, particularly in parietal and fron...
The pathophysiology of neuropsychological disorders due to right deep-seated hemispheric lesions rem...
grantor: University of TorontoHemispatial neglect, characterized as failure to attend to c...
Unilateral visual neglect is commonly defined as impaired ability to attend to stimuli presented on ...
Unilateral visual neglect is commonly defined as impaired ability to attend to stimuli presented on ...
The exact anatomical localization of right hemisphere lesions that lead to left spatial neglect is s...
Unilateral visual neglect is commonly defined as impaired ability to attend to stimuli presented on ...
The exact anatomical localization of right hemisphere lesions that lead to left spatial neglect is s...
Systematic individual neuroanatomical (MRI) and neuropsychological investigations were conducted for...
A major challenge for any anatomical study of spatial neglect in neurological patients is that human...
International audienceThe exact anatomical localization of right hemisphere lesions that lead to lef...
The critical lesion site responsible for the syndrome of unilateral spatial neglect has been debated...