“…Right-hemisphere strokes have been linked to a variety of psychiatric, neurobehavioral, and cognitive deficits, including depression (Robinson, 2003), mania (Cummings & Mendez, 1984), neglect (Jordan & Hillis, 2005), emotional recognition and expression difficulties (Charbonneau, Scherzer, Aspirot, & Cohen, 2003;Kucharska-Pietura, Phillips, Gernand, & David, 2003), and deficits in visuospatial processing (Nadler, Grace, White, Butters, & Malloy, 1996), visual and verbal memory (Gillespie, Bowen, & Foster, 2006), processing speed (Gerritsen, Berg, Deelman, Visser-Keizer, & Meyboom-de Jong, 2003), and attention (Stapleton, Ashburn, & Stack, 2001). Right-hemisphere strokes are also more poorly recognized than left-hemisphere lesions (Foerch et al, 2005), which could place these patients at risk for fewer treatment options (e.g., falling outside time windows for tissue plasma activator) and poorer outcomes (e.g., increased morbidity and mortality).…”