“…The superior parietal cortex in general has been associated with the manipulation of information in working memory (Koenigs, Barbey, Postle, & Grafman, 2009), processing of spatial relationships in both American and British Sign Language (Emmorey et al, 2005; MacSweeney et al, 2002), and spatial attention in general (Corbetta, Miezin, Shulman, & Petersen, 1993). The SPL, in particular, has been associated with a number of functions related to spatial attention, such as shifting spatial attention (Molenberghs, Mesulam, Peeters, & Vandenberghe, 2007), the communication of location and spatial classifiers in ASL (Emmorey et al, 2002; 2005; 2013), maintaining an internal representation of body position (Wolpert, Goodbody, & Husain, 1998), integrating audiovisual information (Molholm et al, 2006), coordinating actions in space (Segal & Petrides, 2012), completion of spatial mental tasks, such as mental mazes (Jerde et al, 2008), keeping track of referents in discourse (Almor et al, 2007), and the representation and processing of plural entities in language comprehension (Boiteau, Bowers, Nair, & Almor, 2014). The varied functions of the SPL in spatial attentional processes are of particular interest to the present study, which was primarily a study of language, not of spatial attention.…”