Dissociation of body-centered and stimulus-centered representations in unilateral neglect

Background: Previous studies on unilateral neglect have shown that there are at least two types of neglect—i.e., body-centered and stimulus-centered neglect. These symptoms suggest that the human brain has at least two different reference frames for processing external space. It is unknown, however, whether these two frames are represented independently in the brain and if so, which areas (or networks) of the brain are responsible for each frame of reference. Objective: To determine whether body-centered neglect and stimulus-centered neglect can be dissociated in patients with brain injury. Methods: New figure discriminative cancellation tasks were designed to simultaneously assess body-centered neglect and stimulus-centered neglect. Two neglect patients with lesions located in different anatomic regions were required to circle every complete figure and to cross out every figure with a missing portion on a sheet of white (29.7 × 42 cm) paper. Results: Patient 1 omitted leftward stimuli on the paper, but the stimuli he found were correctly circled or crossed out. On the other hand, Patient 2 marked stimuli across the paper although he mistakenly circled stimuli that were missing a portion of their left side. Neither patient manifested interaction between the two types of neglect. Conclusion: The results of this study clearly showed double dissociation between the two types of neglect. Furthermore, it not only provides evidence that there are two distinct systems of reference frame for external space in the human brain, but also adds new knowledge indicating that these two systems function independently, at least in part.

[1]  Alfonso Caramazza,et al.  Dissociable Coordinate Frames of Unilateral Spatial Neglect: “Viewer-Centered” Neglect , 1998, Brain and Cognition.

[2]  A. Caramazza,et al.  Spatially Specific Deficits in Processing Graphemic Representations in Reading and Writing , 1995, Brain and Language.

[3]  Alfonso Caramazza,et al.  Deficit to stimulus-centered, letter shape representations in a case of “unilateral neglect” , 1991, Neuropsychologia.

[4]  Horizontal and Vertical Neglect Dyslexia , 1993, Brain and Language.

[5]  Robin Walker,et al.  Spatial and object-based neglect , 1995 .

[6]  D. Levine,et al.  Left visual spatial neglect is both environment‐centered and body‐centered , 1987, Neurology.

[7]  M. Mesulam Attentional networks, confusional states, and neglect syndromes. , 2000 .

[8]  K M Heilman,et al.  Performance On hemispatial pointing task by patients with neglect syndrome , 1983, Neurology.

[9]  M. Imbert,et al.  Variations of the egocentric reference among normal subjects and a patient with unilateral neglect , 1995, Neuropsychologia.

[10]  A. Young,et al.  Neglect and visual recognition. , 1992, Brain : a journal of neurology.

[11]  C Luzzatti,et al.  Unilateral neglect, representational schema and consciousness. , 1979, Brain : a journal of neurology.

[12]  Roberto Cubelli,et al.  Left of what? The role of egocentric coordinates in neglect , 1997, Journal of neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry.

[13]  E. Làdavas,et al.  Is the hemispatial deficit produced by right parietal lobe damage associated with retinal or gravitational coordinates? , 1987, Brain : a journal of neurology.

[14]  J. Driver,et al.  Can Visual Neglect Operate in Object-centred Co-ordinates? An Affirmative Single-case Study , 1991 .

[15]  Jon Driver,et al.  Preserved figure-ground segregation and symmetry perception in visual neglect , 1992, Nature.

[16]  Alfonso Caramazza,et al.  Spatial representation of words in the brain implied by studies of a unilateral neglect patient , 1990, Nature.

[17]  A. Hillis,et al.  Unilateral spatial neglect in dissociable frames of reference: a comment on Farah, Brunn, Wong, Wallace, and Carpenter (1990) , 1998, Neuropsychologia.

[18]  R. Rafal,et al.  Axis-based neglect of visual shapes , 1994, Neuropsychologia.

[19]  H. Karnath,et al.  Trunk orientation as the determining factor of the 'contralateral' deficit in the neglect syndrome and as the physical anchor of the internal representation of body orientation in space. , 1991, Brain : a journal of neurology.

[20]  G. Pellegrino,et al.  Coordinate Frames for Naming Misoriented Chimerics: A Case Study of Visuo-Spatial Neglect , 1995, Cortex.

[21]  Morris Moscovitch,et al.  Object-Centered Neglect in Patients with Unilateral Neglect: Effects of Left-Right Coordinates of Objects , 1994, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.

[22]  R Tissot,et al.  Qualitative analysis of unilateral spatial neglect in relation to laterality of cerebral lesions , 1972, Journal of neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry.

[23]  Martin Arguin,et al.  Evidence for an Independent Stimuluscentered Spatial Reference Frame from a Case of Visual Hemineglect , 1993, Cortex.

[24]  Alfonso Caramazza,et al.  A framework for interpreting distinct patterns of hemispatial neglect , 1995 .

[25]  M. Albert A simple test of visual neglect , 1973, Neurology.

[26]  R. Walker,et al.  Object-Based Neglect: An Investigation of the Contributions of Eye Movements and Perceptual Completion , 1996, Cortex.

[27]  K. Heilman,et al.  Neglect and Related Disorders , 1984, Seminars in neurology.

[28]  A Chatterjee,et al.  Picturing unilateral spatial neglect: viewer versus object centred reference frames. , 1994, Journal of neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry.

[29]  A. Yamadori,et al.  Effect of head-centered and body-centered hemispace in unilateral neglect. , 1996, Journal of clinical and experimental neuropsychology.

[30]  Alfonso Caramazza,et al.  Levels of representation, co-ordinate frames, and unilateral neglect , 1990 .

[31]  Michael Fetter,et al.  Ocular space exploration in the dark and its relation to subjective and objective body orientation in neglect patients with parietal lesions , 1995, Neuropsychologia.

[32]  P. Carpenter,et al.  Frames of reference for allocating attention to space: Evidence from the neglect syndrome , 1990, Neuropsychologia.

[33]  T. Schenkenberg,et al.  Line bisection and unilateral visual neglect in patients with neurologic impairment , 1980, Neurology.