“…While a great deal of research has tested the visuo-spatial abilities of neglect patients, both in vision (Duncan et al, 1999;Vuilleumier & Rafal, 2000) and audition (Bellmann, Meuli, & Clarke, 2001;Griffith et al, 1997), much less is known about their perception of motion. Conversely, visual motion perception in parietal patients has rarely been studied (Braun, Petersen, Schonle, & Fahle, 1998;Greenlee, Lang, Mergner, & Seeger, 1995;Greenlee & Smith, 1997;Schenk & Zihl, 1997) and the exception is a large body of work that has concentrated on 'motion-blind' patients who are usually affected by bilateral lesions involving the human homologue of motion area V5 (McLeod, Dittrich, Driver, Perrett, & Zihl, 1996;Vaina, Lemay, Bienfang, Choi, & Nakayama, 1990;Zihl, von Cramon, & Mai, 1983) with no involvement of the parietal cortices.…”