“…While it is true that patients suffering from primary sensory damage can often compensate for their de®cits via appropriate eye and head movements, estimates of the percentage of hemianopic patients that exhibit spontaneous visual recovery have only ranged between 12 and 30% (see Chapter 2, Zihl, 2000). In contrast, two recent studies by Kasten and colleagues have shown that 1 hr of visual ®eld training per day over a 6-month period in patients with visual ®eld defects resulted in signi®cant enlargements of the visual ®eld, as tested via conventional perimetry, as well as some bene®ts in color and form recognition (Kasten, Poggel, & Sabel, 2000;Kasten, Wuest, Behrens-Bamann, & Sabel, 1998). Nonetheless, a substantial number of stroke patients suffer from cortical damage that compromises higher order visual and attentional abilities as well, particularly when the right hemisphere is affected (De Renzi, 1982;Posner, Walker, Friedrich, & Rafal, 1984;Robertson & Rafal, 2000;Zihl, 2000).…”