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Original Articles

Impairments of oculomotor control in a patient with a right temporo-parietal lesion

, , , &
Pages 990-999 | Received 21 Sep 2005, Accepted 24 Apr 2006, Published online: 24 Apr 2007
 

Abstract

Goal-driven control over saccade target selection requires the inhibition of task-irrelevant, stimulus-driven saccades. A widely held assumption is that frontal structures are of critical importance for this function. Here we report the oculomotor capture behaviour of a patient with a right temporo-parietal lesion, which challenges this view. T.H. was asked to search for a target among distractors and to signal its location with a saccade. A task-irrelevant, additional distractor appeared with or without abrupt onset, and it was either similar or dissimilar in its colour to the target. Compared to controls, T.H. showed an elevated level of capture overall. He also showed spatial extinction, which was partially overridden by an abrupt onset distractor. These results support the view that effective oculomotor control depends on an intact network of frontal and posterior brain regions. We argue that stimulus-driven and goal-driven signals are computed at different stages, but are ultimately combined in a common functional salience map.

We would like to thank all the participants for their time and patience and the anonymous reviewers and the editor for most helpful comments on a previous version of the script. S.B. is funded by the Royal Society of Edinburgh/Lloyds TSB Foundation, and C.L., I.D.G, and M.H. are supported by grants from the EPSRC and the Royal Society.

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