“…This lateralized spatio-attentional deficit in extinction patients may be exacerbated by nonlateralized deficits of selective attention, such as a reduction of attentional capacity, so that ultimately only the ipsilesional target is attentionally selected and available for overt report (de Haan et al, 2012;Driver, Mattingley, Rorden, & Davis, 1997;Karnath, 1988). In neurologically healthy subjects, the right (de Haan, Bither, et al, 2015), or right and left (Çiçek, Gitelman, Hurley, Nobre, & Mesulam, 2007;Geng et al, 2006) IPS show(s) higher levels of neural activation when attention is bilaterally oriented compared to situations where the focus of attention is unilateral. Two brain regions are thought to be involved in our ability to attend to multiple simultaneously-presented lateralized targets, and the failure of this ability in extinction patients.…”