Title: Spatial Attention
1Spatial Attention
- Chris Rorden
- Posterior Right Hemisphere Injury
- Extinction
- Neglect
- Balints Syndrome
- Anosognosia
www.mricro.com
2Extinction
- Patients can report single item at any location.
- Only report ipsilesional item when two targets
are presented simultaneously.
left
right
right
3Explanations for extinction
- Low level perceptual deficit
- Pickpocket example
- Attentional deficit
- Disengage deficit get locked on contralesional
item (Posner et al) - Attentional bias
4Extinction
- Patients extinguish task-relevant information
(Baylis et al. (1993) Journal of Cognitive
Neuroscience 5 453-466)
E
F
E
E
F on right E on left
E on right
Task report identity
blue on right
blue on right, purple on left
Task report color
5Intact Enumeration
- Healthy people subitize can count five
objects as fast as one. - Vuilleumier and Rafal (1999) show patients can
still count
Localize
Count
6Prior entry task
- Task Report which side appeared first.
- More sensitive measure of any deficit (in ms).
- Taps perception not speed of motor response.
7Normal Performance
Right-first
8Rorden et al (1997)
Right-first
Right-first
9What is simultaneous (Baylis et al. 2002)
- Target detection
- Extinction most severe when items are actually
simultaneous.
- Prior Entry Task
- Contralesional item must lead to appear
simultaneous.
JB left injury KH left injury TP right
injury
10Neglect
- Clinical deficits could be motoric or perceptual.
- Experimental tasks demonstrate pure perceptual
component. - Do patients have motoric deficits?
11Neglect Association of deficits
- Neglect is easy to diagnose acutely
- Patients ignore contralateral stimuli
- Common neglect symptoms
- Perceptual problems
- Deficits within and between objects
- Mental imagery problems
- Motoric deficits
- Extinction
- Different patients exhibit different symptoms
(dissociations). - Is neglect a meaningless entity? (Halligan
Marshall, 1992)
12Line Bisection and cancellation
- Classic measures neglect.
- These tasks are not pure motoric and perceptual
deficits can hinder performance. - These tasks dissociate
- Cancellation is sensitive but not specific
(patients with perseveration can fail this) - Bisection deficits are often independent of other
neglect like behavior.
13Space versus object neglect
- Some patients exhibit egocentric neglect
ignoring items on the left side of a display. - Other Patients exhibit allocentric neglect
ignoring the left side of items regardless of
their position in the display.
14Visual imagery deficits
- Patients can neglect information in imagined
space. - Even unexperienced mental imagery Imagine you
are in the North of France looking South what
cities do you see?
15Visual imagery deficits
- Example What do you see when you walk from your
home to your pub? Versus What do you see when
you walk home from the pub? - Demonstrates neglect not purely perceptual.
16Motoric Deficits
- In some patients, motoric deficits appear to
dominate perceptual deficits. - Example Line bisection task where left movements
adjust response rightwards.
17Motoric deficits mirror reversal task
- In some patients, motoric deficits appear to
dominate perceptual deficits. - Example Line bisection task observed through
mirror.
18Different symptoms?
- Perhaps TPJ misleading two anatomically and
behaviourally distinct patient groups (Rorden et
al, 2005)
- IPS patients line bisection and cancellation
deficits - Anterior patients only cancellation deficits
19Conclusions
- We can explain previous lesion studies
- Neglect patients
- Bisection error posterior injury, Accurate
bisection anterior injury - Binder (1992), Mort (2003), Rorden (2005)
- Post-hoc analysis of Mort data patients with IPS
injury have x2.5 the line bisection bias as those
without IPS injury. Yet, these patients are much
better (find 40/60 items) on cancellation task
than those without (find 16/60). - Patients without neglect
- Bisection errors posterior injury
- Machado (1999)
- Explains fMRI/TMS studies showing IPS not TPJ
crucial for attention. - Problem previous fMRI studies have not observed
STG activations.
20What is normal attention like?
21Balints Syndrome
- Dorsal Simultanagnosia
- Rapid perception of single objects.
- Appear to get locked onto one object.
22Balints syndrome
- Optic Ataxia Misdirected movement
- Tend to reach exactly where they are fixating
(magnetic misreaching) - Ocular Apraxia Visual scanning deficit
- Tend to keep eyes locked straight ahead, and move
whole head. However, can make saccades on demand. - Dorsal Simultanagnosia Can see only one object
23Simultanagnosia
- Patients with simultanagnosia appear to only see
one object at a time. - Object grouping seems intact.
24Covert awareness
- Unable to report the global letter (the large P)
- Yet faster to name small letter if it matches the
large letter. - Suggests residual global processing.
25Patient KB
26Find the O, or find the Q
- For healthy people
- Finding a Q in Os is easy it pops out.We see
the Q immediately. - Finding an O in Qs is hard.We have to inspect
each item. - How about KB?
27Patient KB
Find Q among Os
Find O among Qs
2500
2500
2
3
2000
2000
Reaction Time (ms)
8
Reaction Time (ms)
1500
1500
0
2
30
11
1
3
1000
1000
3
2
5
500
500
4
8
12
4
8
12
Set size
28Conclusions
- KB is only aware of one object.
- Yet, parts of her brain see the whole scene.
29Double neglect?
- Is Balints syndrome a type of double neglect?
(e.g. Farah, 1990). - Neglect usually from right parietal damage and
neglect left space - Balints patients neglect both sides of space but
can see a single object. - Do not neglect a portion of the objects they see.
In fact, they see nothing but objects. - Balints syndrome most often associated with more
superior and posterior injury than neglect. - Therefore, some argue that neglect and Balints
probably reflect different underlying deficits.
30Anosognosia
- Anosagnosia is the denial of illness which is
often seen in brain-injured patients. Frequently
associated with hemineglect. - Anton (1899) - Reported the case of UM who was
shown to suffer from cortical blindness but
denied this. (termed Anton's syndrome). Patients
pupils respond to light but the patient is unable
to demonstrate functional sight. Deny any visual
difficulty. Confabulate responses, guess, and
make excuses for deficit e.g., "the room lights
are too dim" or "I don't have my glasses with me" - Von Monokow (1885) - Reported a 70 year old
patient who had suffered bilateral damage to
posterior brain areas and exhibited loss of sight
of which the patient was not aware (patient
attributed visual deficit to loss of ambient
light).
31Explanations for Anosognosia
- Several possible explanations
- Psychological defence mechanism
- Absent feedback
- Confabulation
- Heilman intentional model
32Denial
- Anosognosia may reflect denial, as a defence
mechanism (Weinstein and Kahn, 1955) - psychologically motivated, an unconscious defence
- mechanism to attenuate the distress of a
catastrophic event (e.g. hemiplegia). - The location of the brain lesion determines the
disability. This is separate from the mechanism
of denial. - Most Anosognosia patients have RH damage (also
shown with Wada testing Gilmore et al., 1992)
33Sensory feedback
- Anosognosia might result from reduced or absent
sensory feedback (Levine et al., 1991) - Think they have moved hand but dont know they
have not because no somatosensory feedback to
provide mismatch - But many patients still unaware of hemiplegia
when given visual feedback - Could this be unawareness of their hand
(asomatognosia)?
34Confabulation
- Feinberg suggests confabulation, with strong
association between - illusory limb movements (claim they can move
paralyzed limb), - Neglect
- Anosognosia
- Also suggests that patients with neglect often
confabultate what happens in neglected space.
35Feed-forward
Anosagnosia as a failure of monitoring associated
with
-
- Failure to set the monitor
- 2. Absence of feedback
- 3. False feedback (monitor dysfunction).
Heilman et al., 1998.