2010
DOI: 10.1093/brain/awq052
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A deficit of spatial remapping in constructional apraxia after right-hemisphere stroke

Abstract: Constructional apraxia refers to the inability of patients to copy accurately drawings or three-dimensional constructions. It is a common disorder after right parietal stroke, often persisting after initial problems such as visuospatial neglect have resolved. However, there has been very little experimental investigation regarding mechanisms that might contribute to the syndrome. Here, we examined whether a key deficit might be failure to integrate visual information correctly from one fixation to the next. Sp… Show more

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Cited by 73 publications
(66 citation statements)
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“…In other words, the similarity of BOLD activity with that of EB's behavioural performance (poorest performance on Shape, then Material, then Place task) suggests that the supramarginal gyrus activity may relate more closely to EB's behavioural performance across the various types of tasks rather than material-specific echo processing per se. In keeping with this, supramarginal gyrus activation is often associated with spatial mapping processes, being involved in remapping visual spatial information across saccades (Russell et al, 2010), as well as in circumstances in which attentional capture by memory content is maximal (e.g., strong…”
Section: Shape-specific Processingmentioning
confidence: 86%
“…In other words, the similarity of BOLD activity with that of EB's behavioural performance (poorest performance on Shape, then Material, then Place task) suggests that the supramarginal gyrus activity may relate more closely to EB's behavioural performance across the various types of tasks rather than material-specific echo processing per se. In keeping with this, supramarginal gyrus activation is often associated with spatial mapping processes, being involved in remapping visual spatial information across saccades (Russell et al, 2010), as well as in circumstances in which attentional capture by memory content is maximal (e.g., strong…”
Section: Shape-specific Processingmentioning
confidence: 86%
“…In particular, an impairment of visual remapping has been postulated to increase the handicap of neglect patients consecutive to right inferior parietal damage [17], being responsible, for example, for the disorganized copying of Rey's figure [16], revisiting behaviour in visual search [42] and deficient spatial working memory ( [23]; figure 3b). More recently, deficient visual remapping has been demonstrated in constructional apraxia [37], an isolated deficit of visual disorganization observed in the entire visual field without a lateralized bias of attention (figure 3a). Symptoms of disorganized copying and revisiting without a lateralized bias of attention or a lack of visual synthesis during ocular exploration of visual scenes are also observed in addition to simultanagnosia in patients with posterior cortical atrophy causing extensive bilateral damage of the PPC [43].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…His impressive performance on the visuospatial tasks of the WAIS-IV (and normal functioning on the VOSP) were particularly salient, however, given that the traditional role ascribed to the right posterior parietal cortex is in the processing of visuospatial information (e.g. [42] and, hence, this strength seems somewhat hard to reconcile with the notion of aberrant function within the superior parietal lobule. Nevertheless, lesion-deficit analyses using previous versions of the tests that constitute the Perceptual Reasoning domain suggest that the tasks on which Mr A excelled rely upon inferior parietal, occipital, and superior temporal regions of the right hemisphere [43].Thus, the neural substrate that operates when performing tasks within this domain may be somewhat distinct from those implicated in body integrity identity disorder.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%