Lexical Processes and Eye Movements in Neglect Dyslexia

Neglect dyslexia is a disturbance in the allocation of spatial attention over a letter string following unilateral brain damage. Patients with this condition may fail to read letters on the contralesional side of an orthographic string. In some of these cases, reading is better with words than with non-words. This word superiority effect has received a variety of explanations that differ, among other things, with regard to the spatial distribution of attention across the letter string during reading. The primary goal of the present study was to explore the interaction between attention and lexical processes by recording eye movements in a patient (F.C.) with severe left neglect dyslexia who was required to read isolated word and non-word stimuli of various length. F.C.’s ocular exploration of orthographic stimuli was highly sensitive to the lexical status of the letter string. We found that: (1) the location to which F.C. directed his initial saccade (obtained approximately 230 ms post-stimulus onset) differed between word and non-word stimuli; (2) the patient spent a greater amount of time fixating the contralesional side of word than non-word strings. Moreover, we also found that F.C. failed to identify the left letters of a string despite having fixated them, thus showing a clear dissociation between eye movement responses and conscious access to orthographic stimuli. Our data suggest the existence of multiple interactions between lexical, attentional and eye movement systems that occur from very initial stages of visual word recognition.

[1]  S. Liversedge,et al.  Saccadic eye movements and cognition , 2000, Trends in Cognitive Sciences.

[2]  Erik D. Reichle,et al.  Eye movement control in reading: accounting for initial fixation locations and refixations within the E-Z Reader model , 1999, Vision Research.

[3]  K. Rayner Eye movements in reading and information processing: 20 years of research. , 1998, Psychological bulletin.

[4]  M. Posner,et al.  Establishing a time‐line of word recognition: evidence from eye movements and event‐related potentials , 1998, Neuroreport.

[5]  G. Basso,et al.  Visual extinction as a spatio‐temporal disorder of selective attention , 1998, Neuroreport.

[6]  S. E. Black,et al.  Impaired visual search in patients with unilateral neglect: an oculographic analysis , 1997, Neuropsychologia.

[7]  A. Berti,et al.  Neglect as a deficit determined by an imbalance between multiple spatial representations , 1997, Experimental Brain Research.

[8]  Giuseppe Di Pellegrino,et al.  Spatial extinction on double asynchronous stimulation , 1997, Neuropsychologia.

[9]  C. Umilta,et al.  Lexical and semantic processing in the absence of word reading: Evidence from neglect dyslexia , 1997, Neuropsychologia.

[10]  D. Bub,et al.  Lexical Constraints on Reading Accuracy in Neglect Dyslexia , 1997 .

[11]  Tim Shallice,et al.  Preserved semantic access in neglect dyslexia , 1997, Neuropsychologia.

[12]  David L. Sheinberg,et al.  Eye movements during parallel-serial visual search. , 1997, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[13]  C. Kennard,et al.  Abnormal temporal dynamics of visual attention in spatial neglect patients , 1997, Nature.

[14]  Glyn W. Humphreys,et al.  A vision over time and space , 1997, Nature.

[15]  E. Ldavas,et al.  Eye Movements and Orienting of Attention in Patients with Visual Neglect , 1997, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.

[16]  D. Robinson,et al.  Shared neural control of attentional shifts and eye movements , 1996, Nature.

[17]  J. Walker Saccadic Eye Movements in Object-based Neglect , 1996 .

[18]  R. Walker,et al.  Saccadic eye movement programming in unilateral neglect , 1996, Neuropsychologia.

[19]  H. Deubel,et al.  Saccade target selection and object recognition: Evidence for a common attentional mechanism , 1996, Vision Research.

[20]  J. Duncan Cooperating brain systems in selective perception and action. , 1996 .

[21]  Andrew W. Ellis,et al.  "Neglect dyslexia" and the early visual processing of letters in words and nonwords , 1995 .

[22]  B. Dosher,et al.  The role of attention in the programming of saccades , 1995, Vision Research.

[23]  R. Desimone,et al.  Neural mechanisms of selective visual attention. , 1995, Annual review of neuroscience.

[24]  Hans-Otto Karnath,et al.  Spatial Limitation of Eye Movements During Ocular Exploration of Simple Line Drawings in Neglect Syndrome , 1994, Cortex.

[25]  Jon Driver,et al.  Grouping reduces visual extinction: Neuropsychological evidence for weight-linkage in visual selection , 1994 .

[26]  C. Umilta,et al.  The role of right side objects in left side neglect: A dissociation between perceptual and directional motor neglect , 1993, Neuropsychologia.

[27]  Walter Huber,et al.  Abnormal eye movement behaviour during text reading in neglect syndrome: A case study , 1992, Neuropsychologia.

[28]  Matthew Rizzo,et al.  Visual search in hemineglect : what stirs idle eyes? , 1992 .

[29]  Michael D. Reddix,et al.  Perception and Cognition in Reading: Where is the Meeting Point? , 1992 .

[30]  A. Young,et al.  Disentangling neglect and hemianopia , 1991, Neuropsychologia.

[31]  M. Farah,et al.  The relation between spatial attention and reading: evidence from the neglect syndrome , 1991 .

[32]  M. Mozer,et al.  Perceptual and conceptual mechanisms in neglect dyslexia. Two contrasting case studies. , 1995, Brain : a journal of neurology.

[33]  Barbara A. Wilson,et al.  A rose is a rose or a nose: A deficit in initial letter identification , 1990 .

[34]  M. Jane Riddoch,et al.  Neglect and the peripheral dyslexias , 1990 .

[35]  J. Riddoch,et al.  Interaction of attentional and lexical processes in neglect dyslexia , 1990 .

[36]  Michael Garman,et al.  Psycholinguistics: Accessing the mental lexicon , 1990 .

[37]  Carlo Umiltà,et al.  The Deployment of Visual Attention in the Intact Field of Hemineglect Patients , 1990, Cortex.

[38]  M. Mozer,et al.  On the Interaction of Selective Attention and Lexical Knowledge: A Connectionist Account of Neglect Dyslexia , 1990, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.

[39]  J. O'Regan Eye movements and reading. , 1990, Reviews of oculomotor research.

[40]  Eileen Kowler Eye movements and their role in visual and cognitive processes. , 1990, Reviews of oculomotor research.

[41]  H. Tsukagoshi,et al.  Visuospatial processes of line bisection and the mechanisms underlying unilateral spatial neglect. , 1989, Brain : a journal of neurology.

[42]  Alexander Pollatsek,et al.  Recognition of visual letter strings following injury to the posterior visual spatial attention system , 1988 .

[43]  James L. McClelland,et al.  An interactive activation model of context effects in letter perception: part 1.: an account of basic findings , 1988 .

[44]  G. Rizzolatti,et al.  Reorienting attention across the horizontal and vertical meridians: Evidence in favor of a premotor theory of attention , 1987, Neuropsychologia.

[45]  James L. McClelland,et al.  James L. McClelland, David Rumelhart and the PDP Research Group, Parallel distributed processing: explorations in the microstructure of cognition . Vol. 1. Foundations . Vol. 2. Psychological and biological models . Cambridge MA: M.I.T. Press, 1987. , 1989, Journal of Child Language.

[46]  A. Young,et al.  “Neglect dyslexia” and the early visual processing of letters in words and nonwords , 1987 .

[47]  E K Warrington,et al.  The dissociation of visuospatial neglect and neglect dyslexia. , 1987, Journal of neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry.

[48]  M. Posner,et al.  Cueing Spatial Attention during Processing of Words and Letter Strings in Normals. Technical Report #2. , 1986 .

[49]  F. J. Friedrich,et al.  Effects of parietal injury on covert orienting of attention , 1984, The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience.

[50]  G. Avanzini,et al.  Oculomotor disorders in cortical lesions in man: The role of unilateral neglect , 1983, Neuropsychologia.

[51]  E K Warrington,et al.  Neglect dysgraphia. , 1983, Journal of neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry.

[52]  M. Potter 24 – Representational Buffers: The Eye—Mind Hypothesis in Picture Perception, Reading, and Visual Search1 , 1983 .

[53]  James L. McClelland,et al.  An interactive activation model of context effects in letter perception: I. An account of basic findings. , 1981 .

[54]  L. Stark,et al.  Saccadic eye movement strategies in patients with homonymous hemianopia , 1981, Annals of neurology.

[55]  R. Remington Attention and saccadic eye movements. , 1980, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[56]  K. Rayner Eye Guidance in Reading: Fixation Locations within Words , 1979, Perception.

[57]  George W. McConkie,et al.  On the Role and Control of Eye Movements in Reading , 1979 .