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Original Articles

Hemi-inattention in visual search for parallel lines after focal cerebral lesions

Pages 319-331 | Accepted 10 Dec 1987, Published online: 04 Jan 2008
 

Abstract

Visual search and line orientation discrimination was studied in 67 braindamaged and 15 control subjects, with the aim of demonstrating that hemiinattention follows both left- and right-hemisphere damage even when confined to the frontal lobe. Both anterior and posterior lesions of either hemisphere caused inattention to the side contralateral to the lesion, this asymmetry being pronounced at the onset of search, especially in patients with anterior lesions. Hemi-inattention was associated with the overall inefficiency of line orientation discrimination and exploration as well as simple verbal performance in right-hemisphere-damaged patients, but tended to dissociate from these deficits in left hemisphere-damaged patients. Brain-damaged patients were inferior to the control subjects, and women inferior to men in the overall efficiency of exploration, but only women with right posterior lesions had a deficit in line orientation discrimination.

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