Manual line bisection and a perceptual variant thereof (the Landmark test) are widely used to assess visuospatial neglect in neurological patients, but little is known about the cognitive strategies involved. In the Landmark test, one could explicitly compare the lengths of the left and right line segments; alternatively, one could compute the centre of mass of the display. We here investigate with functional MRI if these cognitive strategies modulate the neural mechanisms underlying judgements whether pre-transected horizontal lines are correctly bisected (the Landmark test) in normal volunteers. Functional neuroimaging (fMRI) was carried out in 12 healthy volunteers who judged: (a) whether the line segments on either side of the transecti...